Author's note
Here we are again - I've been amazed at the level of engagement from people both through the sites I post on, on my patreon and also on my discord server. Thank you all for being so vested in my story.
As Always, thanks to Dr Mark for his editing skills.
I decided to email Gulfstream to ask them what would be required for Caleb to be able to fly the G500, within 4 hours I got an email back.
Good afternoon PM,
It would require a Commercial License due to the weight and the altitude of flight. Google search "Private Pilot Limitations" and Commercial Pilot Limitations". flying Twin Engine Jets requires multiple type ratings to include Instrument Rating and Type Rating for each different model aircraft to be flown.
Regards,
[REDACTED]
System Specialist II | Tech Ops Mid Cabin Mech Systems
Gulfstream
How cool is that???
PM
Chapter 55 - Stolen Baby
22 years ago
"No," said John, "I didn't use any power on her. We met at a bar, we were both a little drunk, more than a little horny, and one thing led to another."
"And now you're having a bastard child," said Zachariah with a disapproving stare. "When is it due?"
"Sometime in February," John replied.
"Keep us updated," said Maggie.
The baby was born right on time on St Valentine's Day. That evening Maggie visited the hospital and, without anyone remembering she was there, applied the amulet to little Melanie. She could already tell that Melanie was going to be powerful, not as powerful as the baby she held a few months ago, but powerful nonetheless. It seemed that John had a strong bloodline. If he'd only settle down with the one woman and be more responsible about where he left his seed.
Maggie's visit had unforeseen circumstances though. She'd bypassed hospital security so that there was no record of her entering or leaving the building. While she was there, she amended the child's birth record to indicate the presence of the 'birthmark' on her wrist.
+++++
Connie Tyler was a desperate woman. She'd tried and tried for a child over and over, only to have miscarriage after miscarriage. Her own marriage had suffered and broken down with the stress and disappointment of repeatedly trying and failing to have a child. She'd been being treated for depression, but the tablets had made no difference. She knew that she needed a baby. . .she just had to have a baby. . .and then everything would be alright.
Getting into the hospital had been easy. It was almost a public building. She had found on her frequent previous visits to such establishments that all you needed to do was to look like you knew where you were going and that you had a right to be there. Few people questioned you.
She wore her company ID but turned it so that the card actually faced her body. People would see the lanyard and assume that she was a staff member. Thankfully, people always assumed.
Walking into the hospital, she parked the stroller she'd brought with her in a storeroom on the first floor. She'd been here before and had found that this room was often left unlocked. She took off her coat, scarf, and hat and laid them over the stroller. Underneath she wore scrubs. She'd managed to steal these on her last visit.
Although Connie was desperate, she was not stupid. She was a project manager in a tech company, and so, when it came to carrying out any job, she broke it down in to parts, allocated tasks each with their own timelines and criteria for success, and each leading toward the inevitable goal: the success of the project. This had been no different. Tonight, was the final part of this particular project: to get her a baby.
Putting on a surgical mask she walked confidently up to the maternity floor and stood near the entrance, by a window, apparently talking on her phone.
A woman in a suit exited the unit and Connie approached the door holding her ID as if she were about to use it to let herself in. The woman smiled at her and held the door. Connie nodded her thanks and went inside.
She was in. She looked into a couple of rooms which turned out to be empty. This was a part of her plan that she couldn't prepare for. People moved about in here from hour to hour. She'd have to wing it and see who she found.
The first room with a mother also had a father. Dad was cradling his baby in his arms and grinning like a lunatic. He bounced the infant gently and cooed to it.
"Sorry," said Connie as they looked up, "wrong room."
She moved on. She'd tried three more doors before she hit paydirt. A new mother, exhausted and asleep lay in the bed, beside which a was a crib holding a baby. Connie went in and looked at the baby. She was beautiful. Her eyes were closed and she twitched gently as she slept, but Connie knew that this was the one. This was her baby.
Taking a look to make sure that the mother was still asleep, she pulled a small pair of snips from her pocket and cut the RFID bracelet off the baby's tiny wrist. The bracelet would have set off an alarm if she'd tried to take the baby out of the unit with it in place. She quickly checked that there wasn't another one on the baby's ankle, but there wasn't.
She looked at the tag, which also doubled as an identity band for the baby. "Melanie," she breathed and smiled. She liked that name. Connie frowned when she noted that the tag seemed to have left a mark on the baby's wrist, but no matter that would fade.
She picked up the baby, walked through the door, and out into the corridor. Connie was thankful that the hallway was deserted.
Had it not been for the fact that Maggie had only just left, having applied the amulet to the baby, there might have been someone around to see Connie, or the security camera's might have caught her walking out with a babe in arms, something that was not permitted in the hospital. But Maggie, who had inadvertently held the door for Connie to enter the unit, had disabled all of the safeguards so her own visit would go unnoticed.
Connie took the elevator down to the first floor and slipped into the storeroom where she'd left the stroller. She gently placed the baby into the stroller, and then put on her coat, hat, and scarf. Then she left the hospital as just another mother bringing her child to be seen by one of the many doctors in the building. The security guard even held the door for her.
It was an hour later that the baby Melanie's disappearance was finally noticed. A midwife went in to do her checks and found the crib empty and the mother still asleep. The alarm went up, and the hospital was immediately sealed, but by then Connie and the child were already far away.
Connie had deliberately chosen an out of state hospital. She'd told her colleagues at work that she'd been applying for an adoption and had taken a month's leave of absence to finalize everything.
When she returned to work three weeks later, she was just another proud mother showing off her baby pictures.