Sarah motioned for me to keep quiet with a finger to her lips, then quickly made her way to the door.
After making sure the coast was clear, she asked, “Are you sure?”
I shook my head, then nodded.
“Can't be too sure, but I have this gut feeling it's Galen.”
This time, I didn't hold back and shared my suspicions about the janitor being Galen Brown.
Sarah wasn't surprised; instead, she nodded in agreement.
“That makes sense. He's been sending stuff from abroad, probably got the addresses mixed up and ended up sending them to my place.”
“Or maybe he's been using contacts here to ship things back because every time, the evidence arrives with gifts.”
It didn't take a genius to piece everything together.
But Galen refusing to acknowledge me probably meant he had unfinished business.
Sarah pondered for a moment before tentatively suggesting, “Should I use Jenny as bait?”
“If Jenny shows up at the hospital, he can't possibly ignore his own daughter, right? They haven't seen each other in years.”
I quickly shook my head.
“No way, your dad's been keeping a close eye on Jenny. We'd blow Galen's cover if we did that.”
“He's been at the hospital for years, probably digging up some evidence. We can't afford to let him get hurt again.”
Thinking about the scars on his hands made me shudder.
If Jenny and her mom hadn't left, could it be that their whole family would no longer be here?
If everything was as I suspected, and Talbot could go as far as harming his own kin, what's stopping him from hurting a stranger?
Sarah slumped into a chair.
“You always think of others, burdening yourself with worries. You're not cut out for heavy responsibilities!”
Her words echoed the doctor's. Was I really overthinking?
I lowered my head; it was just that my conscience wouldn't allow me to act otherwise.
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