A young nun at a quiet Ohio convent kept becoming pregnant, but the last baby was born with a hospital bracelet that carried the name of a dead girl.-luna

Mother Catherine did not tell anyone about the bracelet at first.

She folded the tiny plastic band into a paper towel from the hospital restroom and placed it in her coat pocket.

Her hands shook so badly she had to sit in the chapel parking lot before she could drive.

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Rain slid down the windshield in thin crooked lines.

Behind her, inside the hospital, Sister Hope was asleep with her newborn daughter in the bassinet beside her.

The baby was healthy.

That should have been enough to make everyone grateful.

But Mother Catherine could not forget the name printed on the bracelet.

Lily Whitaker.

A girl who had been buried behind St. Agnes seventeen years ago.

A girl the convent records described as an orphan, a runaway, and finally a tragedy.

Mother Catherine remembered the funeral.

She had been younger then, not yet the mother superior, just a strict sister with tired knees and too much faith in procedures.

Lily had been sixteen.

Quiet.

Sharp-eyed.

Always holding her sleeves down over her wrists, even in July.

The town had treated Lily like a problem that needed somewhere to go.

Her aunt could not take her. Her school had stopped calling. The county had placed her at St. Agnes because the convent once ran a small home for girls.

Then one winter morning, Lily was found dead in her room.

The doctor called it heart failure.

There were papers. Signatures. A closed coffin.

Mother Catherine had been told not to ask more.

Now that dead girl’s name had appeared around a newborn’s ankle.

By the time Mother Catherine reached the convent, the rain had turned the cemetery grass dark and slick.

The chapel windows glowed faintly.

The sisters were inside praying for Sister Hope and the baby.

Mother Catherine walked past them without removing her wet coat.

Sister Anne looked up from the pew.

“Mother? Is the baby all right?”

“Yes,” Mother Catherine said.

Her voice sounded strange to her own ears.

She kept walking.

Beneath the chapel was an old records room most people forgot existed.

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