I stopped him.
The card inside contained only one sentence.
“Some arrivals should have remained goodbyes.”
Nothing else.
No signature.
No explanation.
Leon immediately called the nurses’ station.
The florist said they had accepted the order online, and someone had paid a courier in cash to place it.
No name, no receipt, and no trail.
The nurse quietly removed the flowers from our room after asking whether we wanted them discarded.
Neither of us wanted to look at them anymore.
But after everyone left that evening, something kept bothering me.
The ribbon.
I couldn’t explain why.
I walked into the hallway where the bouquet still sat beside the nurses’ desk, waiting to be thrown away.
The nurse nodded.
As I lifted the black ribbon, something metallic slipped into my palm.
A tiny silver baby carriage charm.
My heart stopped.
On the back was a single engraved date.
Nine years ago.
I stared at it until the numbers blurred.
Leon frowned.
“What is it?”
I couldn’t answer.
Years earlier, I’d seen that exact charm hanging from another woman’s bracelet.
Sheila.
She never took it off. Whenever anyone talked about children, she’d spin it around her wrist and smile.
One afternoon she’d laughed and said, “That’s for my future daughter.”
The date engraved on the back wasn’t random.
Leon looked at me.
“You recognize it.”
I nodded.
“I think I know who sent the flowers.”
Before either of us could say another word, my phone vibrated.
I answered.
“Hello?”
Silence.
Several long seconds passed.
Then a calm female voice spoke.
Every muscle in my body locked.
“I bet you never expected to hear from me.”
My throat tightened.
“Sheila.”
She laughed softly.
“What do you want?”
“I just wanted to congratulate you.”
Her voice remained warm, almost pleasant.
“You finally got everything that belonged to me.”
The line went dead.
“Was it her?”
“Yes.”
He looked at the charm again.
“I spent nine years believing silence meant she’d finally let us go.”
“So did I.”
The following morning, we filed a police report before leaving the hospital.
The officer listened patiently.
“Did she threaten you directly?”
“Did she mention harming you or the baby?”
He sighed.
“I understand why you’re frightened.”
“But?”
“Funeral flowers are disturbing, the phone call is disturbing, but neither is a crime by itself.”
He advised us to keep every message, photograph every delivery, and contact them immediately if the behavior escalated.
Once we arrived home, Leon checked every door and window twice before carrying our daughter inside.
The house should have felt comforting.
Instead, every unfamiliar sound made me jump.
That evening, Martha stopped by with dinner. She kissed the baby and frowned when she saw our faces.
“You both look exhausted.”
The flowers.
The card.
The phone call.
Her expression slowly changed from confusion to disbelief.
“Sheila?”
“Of course I do.”
She sat down heavily.
“I haven’t heard that name in years.”
“Neither had we.”
Martha shook her head.
“So did we.”
She looked at the sleeping baby.
“I’m so sorry.”
For a few days, nothing happened.
I began convincing myself Sheila had simply wanted one final chance to frighten us.
Then our mail arrived.
Inside was a large padded envelope with no return address.
Leon carefully opened it.
Inside was our daughter’s professional newborn photograph.
The hospital had taken it the morning after she was born.
Only the baby and I remained.
Attached was another card.
“This is how it should have been.”
I looked at Leon.
“How did she get this?”
We called immediately.
After an internal review, the hospital assured us no employee had released the photograph.
Two days later, the photography company discovered someone had called pretending to be Leon, correctly answered several verification questions, and ordered an early printed proof before it was ever emailed to us.
Sheila hadn’t hacked the system.
That night Leon finally told me everything about Sheila.
Not because he’d been hiding it, but because neither of us had believed it still mattered.
They had dated for less than two years. The relationship had become increasingly unhealthy.
Whenever Leon tried spending time with friends, Sheila accused him of abandoning her.
Whenever he talked about the future, she treated every plan as a promise.
Three months later, he met me.
“There wasn’t any overlap,” he said quietly.
“I know.”
“I never cheated on her.”
“I honestly thought she’d eventually build a happy life.”
Instead, she’d disappeared, or so everyone believed.
A week later, my maternity leave settled into something resembling routine.
Feed the baby.
Nap whenever possible.
Then another package arrived.
Inside was an old photograph.
Leon and Sheila.
Taken years before we met.
Across the picture, someone had written one sentence in neat black ink.
I stared at the words.
Something suddenly felt wrong.
Not just creepy, impossible.
I turned the photograph over.
There was no postmark, no mailing label, just our address written by hand.
He came downstairs.
I handed him the photograph.
His face went pale.
“This wasn’t mailed.”
He pointed toward the envelope.
“It was hand-delivered.”
My stomach dropped.
Someone had walked all the way to our front door. Someone had stood outside our house while we were inside with our newborn daughter.
Leon immediately checked our doorbell camera. The footage from 30 minutes earlier showed someone wearing a hooded sweatshirt and sunglasses placing the envelope on our porch.
But just before leaving, the woman looked directly into the camera.
Then she smiled.
Only for a second.
But it was enough.
Leon froze the image.
“So do I.”
Then my phone buzzed again.
Unknown number.
This time, before I could answer, a text message appeared.
“You’re checking the camera now, aren’t you?”
Leon grabbed my phone.
Another message appeared before either of us could respond.
“You should close the nursery curtains.”
Every hair on my arms stood up.
The nursery faced the backyard. The curtains were still open, and our daughter was asleep in her bassinet.
No one was outside.
At least, no one we could see.
Leon closed every blind in the house before calling the police again. This time they took the situation much more seriously.
An officer reviewed the doorbell footage and the text messages.
“The messages are disturbing, but I need evidence placing her near your home or contacting you directly before I can build a stalking case. Keep every message. If she escalates, we’ll be ready.”
That night, neither of us slept.
The next morning I replayed everything in my head.
The funeral flowers.
The photograph.
The texts.
None of it answered the question that bothered me most.
How had Sheila known exactly when I gave birth?
Leon never posted on social media.
Then I remembered Martha. She loved Facebook.
I opened her profile.
The answer was staring at me.
The day before, she’d proudly shared a picture of herself holding our daughter.
The hospital logo was visible on the blanket.
The caption read, “Welcome to the world, little Sophie. Aunt Martha already loves you more than words can say.”
Hundreds of congratulations filled the comments.
Then I noticed one name.
Grace.
She had commented with nothing more than three pink heart emojis.
Almost nothing was public.
A handful of flower photos.
No family pictures.
No personal information.
The account had been friends with Martha for nearly seven years.
Twenty minutes later, I turned my phone toward her across the kitchen table.
“Martha,” I said, trying to keep my voice calm. “Who is Grace?”
She frowned.
“I don’t know.”
“She’s been your Facebook friend for years.”
“Oh.”
“I think we met in one of those gardening groups.”
“You’ve never met her?”
“Have you ever spoken to her?”
She scrolled farther.
“Oh my goodness.”
“What?”
“I’ve been commenting back and forth with her for years.”
Leon leaned over her shoulder.
She did.
It was a bouquet of white lilies.
Leon immediately called the detective assigned to our case.
He asked us to email screenshots of the profile and every message Grace had ever exchanged with Martha.
Within hours, investigators confirmed what we already suspected.
The account had been created using stolen photographs.
Less than an hour after the detective submitted the preservation request, the account was deactivated.
Sheila had been hiding in plain sight for seven years.
Watching birthdays.
Watching holidays.
Watching our lives unfold.
Without any of us realizing it.
That discovery forced Leon to revisit every strange thing that had happened since we’d met.
“Our wedding invitations.”
I looked at him.
“Remember when 20 people said they never received theirs?”
We’d blamed the post office.
He rubbed his forehead.
“My boss got an anonymous email accusing me of having an affair.”
“We never knew who sent it.”
There had been prank food deliveries, anonymous one-star reviews for Leon’s business, a fake cancellation notice for our honeymoon hotel.
At the time, each incident had seemed unrelated.
Now they formed a single pattern.
She had never stopped.
Waiting for the moment she believed would hurt us the most.
The detective requested that we stop blocking Sheila’s numbers.
“We need her to keep talking.”
“What if she comes here?”
“We’ll be ready.”
Then another message arrived.
“She’s beautiful.”
A picture followed.
It showed our daughter sleeping in her bassinet.
I screamed.
The picture had been taken through the nursery window.
Not today.
Three nights earlier.
Before we’d closed the curtains.
The detective enlarged the image.
A woman standing outside beneath the maple tree.
Too blurry to identify.
But enough to prove she had been on our property.
The police installed temporary surveillance around our home.
The detective believed Sheila was escalating.
Neither did I.
Two weeks later, Martha called.
“Annalise?”
She sounded shaken.
“I think I made another mistake.”
“I got a message from Grace before the account disappeared.”
“What did it say?”
Martha’s voice cracked.
“She asked if the baby was being christened.”
My heart sank. We had planned a small naming ceremony at church the following Sunday.
The detective listened carefully.
Then he smiled for the first time since we’d met.
“I think she’s going to come.”
The ceremony went ahead exactly as planned.
Only this time, several guests weren’t really guests.
A uniformed officer waited outside.
No one except immediate family knew.
Halfway through the service, the church doors opened.
A woman stepped inside carrying a neatly wrapped gift.
She wore a cream-colored dress, her dark hair falling perfectly over her shoulders.
Until I saw her face.
She smiled as though she’d been invited.
Leon stepped in front of our daughter and me before saying a single word.
“You don’t come anywhere near my family.”
Instead, she looked at me.
Then at our daughter.
“I just wanted to meet her.”
The church had gone completely silent.
The detective slowly approached from the side aisle.
She kept smiling.
“You know,” she said softly, “she has my eyes.”
Leon didn’t move.
“You don’t understand.”
“You were supposed to be my family.” She looked straight at me. “You’re living the life that should have been mine.”
“I met Leon months after your relationship ended.”
She shook her head gently.
“That’s what everyone keeps saying.”
“Because it’s true.”
She smiled again.
“It should have been me holding that baby.”
The detective reached her side.
“Ma’am.”
She looked annoyed.
He placed a hand on her arm.
“You’re under arrest for stalking and criminal harassment.”
For the first time, her composure cracked.
She looked at Leon.
“You’re really choosing her?”
“I chose Annalise years ago. And I’ll choose her every single day for the rest of my life.”
Two officers escorted Sheila outside.
Martha burst into tears.
“If I’d known who she really was, I never would have accepted that friend request.”
I hugged her.
As they searched her car, they uncovered enough evidence to explain the past nine years.
Boxes filled with photographs, printouts of Martha’s Facebook posts, maps of our neighborhood, copies of our wedding announcement, lists of our anniversaries, our addresses, our schedules.
And get this: a scrapbook labeled “Our Family.”
Beside it sat unopened baby gifts she’d bought months before my due date.
Every tag read, “For My Daughter.”
In every one, my face had been carefully cut away.
Replaced with hers.
During the trial, the prosecution presented years of evidence.
The fake social media account.
The anonymous messages.
The trespassing.
The surveillance.
The psychological harassment.
The judge sentenced Sheila to prison for stalking, criminal harassment, trespassing, and related offenses. A permanent protective order ensured she could never contact our family again.
For the first time since Sophie was born, we slept without wondering who might be watching us.
Inside were her hospital bracelet, her first tiny socks, and the photograph from the hospital.
I reached for the funeral flower card.
Then I stopped.
I didn’t want my daughter’s story to begin with someone else’s obsession.
I tore the card into tiny pieces and dropped it into the trash.
Others deserve to disappear forever.
As I rocked my daughter to sleep that night, Leon wrapped an arm around both of us.
For years, Sheila had believed she could rewrite our story.
In the end, she never stole a single page.
She only reminded us how fiercely we’d fight to protect the life we had built together.
