Her hands began to shake. “Do you have any idea how humiliating this is? My
reputation in this town…”
“Almost as humiliating,” I interrupted, “as trying to throw a grieving daughter
out onto the street. Or spending five years pretending to love a man just to get
your hands on his real estate portfolio.”
Her expression hardened, morphing from panic into pure malevolence. She looked
at me, her eyes narrowing into dark slits. “You think you’re so smart, Harper.
You think Arthur was this brilliant tactician.” She let out a dry, rattling
laugh that sent a chill down my spine. “You don’t understand anything. You think
he died of natural heart failure? You think he just faded away?”
My blood went ice cold. “What are you talking about?”
Eleanor leaned in close, her designer perfume cloying and suffocating. “He
didn’t build a fortress, Harper. He built his own tomb. And if you don’t sign
this house over to me by tomorrow, I’ll make sure the world knows exactly what
he was hiding in it.”
She turned and marched back toward her car, leaving me standing among the roses,
my heart pounding a frantic, terrifying rhythm against my ribs.
Eleanor’s silver Mercedes disappeared down the road, but the venom of her words
lingered in the garden like a toxic fog. You think he died of natural heart
failure?
I rushed back inside the house, locking the heavy deadbolt behind me. The
silence of the foyer, usually a comfort, suddenly felt oppressive. What did she
mean? My father had been sick for eight months. The doctors called it a rapid,
progressive cardiovascular decline. It was tragic, but it was documented.
I pulled out my phone and called Benjamin.
“Benjamin, she was just here,” I said, pacing the length of the hallway. “She
threatened me. But she said something strange. She implied Dad’s death wasn’t
natural, and that he was hiding something.”
There was a heavy pause on the other end of the line. “Harper,” Benjamin said,
his voice lowering to a serious, hushed register. “I was going to wait until
tomorrow to tell you this, but my private investigator just got back to me
regarding Eleanor’s past. The background check Arthur asked me to run before he
died.”
“Before he died? Dad was investigating her?”
“Yes. And Harper… Arthur wasn’t her first husband. He was her third. Both of
the previous men passed away under suddenly declining health conditions. Both
left her substantial, untethered assets. Arthur was the first one to use a blind
trust.”
I stopped pacing. The floorboards beneath my feet seemed to sway. “Are you
telling me she killed them?”
“I’m telling you there is a pattern, and your father saw it,” Benjamin said
carefully. “He asked me to secure the estate, but he told me he was handling the
‘Eleanor problem’ himself. He said he was leaving you a map. Have you found
anything in the house?”
“No,” I whispered. “Nothing.”
“Look harder,” Benjamin instructed. “Arthur was a methodical man. If he knew he
was in danger, he wouldn’t leave you unprotected.”
I hung up the phone. The house was settling around me, the wood groaning as the
evening air cooled the exterior. I walked into my father’s study. It was exactly
as he had left it. The walls were lined with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. A
massive globe stood in the corner. The brick fireplace, cold and swept clean,
dominated the far wall.
A map.
I began to tear the room apart. I went through the desk drawers, shaking out old
ledgers and empty envelopes. I pulled books off the shelves, checking behind
them. Hours passed. The sun set, plunging the room into shadows until I finally
switched on the brass desk lamp. Dust motes danced in the beam of light.
I sat on the Persian rug, exhausted, running my hands through my hair. I looked
at the fireplace. My father used to sit in his leather armchair, staring into
the flames for hours when he was thinking.
I crawled over to the hearth. I ran my fingers along the rough, soot-stained
bricks. They felt solid, immovable. But as my hand brushed the lower right
quadrant, just behind the decorative iron grating, one of the bricks shifted. It
didn’t just slide; it depressed slightly, with a faint, mechanical click.
My breath hitched. I dug my fingernails into the mortar line and pulled. The
brick slid out smoothly, revealing a dark, rectangular cavity in the masonry.
I reached inside. The air in the hole was cool. My fingers brushed against a
thick, sealed envelope and a small, hard object made of metal and plastic.
I pulled them out into the light. It was a letter, addressed to me in my
father’s elegant, sloping handwriting. And resting on top of it was a silver USB
drive.
My hands trembled violently as I broke the wax seal on the envelope. I unfolded
the heavy parchment. The date at the top was exactly one week before he died.
My dearest Harper,
If you are reading this, then everything has unfolded more or less as I
expected. Eleanor has likely tried to steal the house, and Benjamin has
triggered the trust. I am so profoundly sorry I couldn’t tell you everything
while I was alive. She was watching me too closely, and I needed her to believe
she had the upper hand.
I swallowed hard, a tear spilling over my eyelashes and hitting the paper.
You see, my brave girl, the mysterious illness that is currently failing my
heart is not a mystery at all. I discovered her true nature a year ago. She is
poisoning me.
I dropped the letter. The paper fluttered to the rug like a dead leaf.
I stared at the words, my brain refusing to process the magnitude of the horror.
My father knew he was being murdered. And he had stayed.
Suddenly, the heavy oak front door—the one I had deadbolted hours ago—let out a
loud, distinct click. The sound of a key turning in the lock echoed through the
silent house.
Someone was inside.
Panic, sharp and metallic, flooded my veins. I scrambled backward on the rug,
clutching the letter and the USB drive to my chest.
Footsteps. Slow, deliberate, and muffled by the hallway runner.
I scrambled to my feet, my eyes darting around the study for a weapon. I grabbed
the heavy brass fire poker from the hearth. I stood behind the heavy mahogany
door of the study, holding my breath, my muscles coiled tight enough to snap.
The footsteps moved past the study, heading toward the kitchen. I waited until
the sound faded, then silently pushed the door closed and locked it from the
inside. It wouldn’t hold anyone for long, but it gave me a barrier.
I stumbled to the desk, flipped open my laptop, and jammed the silver USB drive
into the port. I needed to know exactly what I was dealing with. My father had
sacrificed himself to gather this evidence; I couldn’t let it be destroyed.
The drive opened on my screen. It was meticulously organized into folders named
by date. I clicked on a folder from four months ago. Inside were dozens of video
files.
I clicked the first one.
The video was black and white, shot from a high angle—likely a hidden camera
nestled in the crown molding of the kitchen. There was no audio, making the
scene feel like a macabre silent film.
It showed my father sitting at the kitchen island, his shoulders slumped,
looking frail. He was reading a newspaper. Eleanor walked into the frame. She
was wearing her silk robe, looking the picture of a devoted wife. She moved to
the stove and poured hot water into a teacup.