“Stop,” he said.
But it was too late.
Sophie’s expression changed first. Then Stella’s. Then Sarah’s. Recognition rose in them not as some cinematic flood, but as fragments fitting together so quickly the false structure around them could no longer bear the weight.
“I remember the blue shutters,” Sophie said. “The strawberry patch.”
“The swing set,” Stella whispered. “And the treehouse.”
Sarah turned toward Greenfield as if seeing him clearly for the first time in her life.
“I remember the ice cream,” she said. “You said we were going for a treat. Then you told us Mom and Dad were hurt. You said we couldn’t go home.”
Greenfield’s face collapsed inward.
“I was protecting you,” he said. “I was giving you a better life.”
“You were stealing our life,” Sarah said.
Margaret had never been prouder of anything than the strength in her daughter’s voice at that moment.
Greenfield surrendered without violence after that.
FBI agents moved in. The tactical team secured the cabin. The 3 young women—no longer the Strawberry Sisters, no longer Greenfield’s carefully constructed daughters, but Sarah, Sophie, and Stella Harper—were taken to a medical and mental health facility for evaluation, counseling, and the first steps of reunification.
The reunion was not easy.
Margaret had imagined versions of it in dreams for 15 years, but dreams had lied to her the way all grief dreams do. They had made it simple. Crying, yes. Clinging, yes. But simple.
Reality was harder.
The young women sat in a conference room at the county mental health facility looking uncomfortable in every direction. The furniture was neutral. The fluorescent lights were too bright. Dr. Patricia Rosen, a specialist in long-term trauma and reunification, sat with them through the first conversations, guiding what could be guided and letting silence stay where silence was kinder than pressure.
“This is going to take time,” she told Margaret and Jon before the first full meeting. “They have spent 15 years processing a false reality. They may grieve the life they are losing even though that life was built on lies.”
That turned out to be true in every possible way.
Sophie said she kept expecting to wake up back at the farm, half certain that Greenfield would come tell them the outside world had tricked them and chores were waiting.
Sarah asked the question that cut deepest.
“Why didn’t you find us sooner?”
Margaret could not answer that without breaking, but she answered anyway.
“We never stopped looking,” she said. “We followed every lead. Every tip. Every photograph. But he kept you hidden.”
Jon added what he could.
“He took you somewhere isolated. He controlled where you went, who you saw. He built a whole life around making sure no one could connect you back to us.”
“It didn’t feel like a prison,” Stella said quietly. “We had each other. We had work. We were happy there a lot of the time.”
Dr. Rosen nodded gently.