Nobody argued.
When she said, “Start with Clara’s,” my stomach dropped.
Then Adam found the necklace.
I stood in my doorway while they searched my drawers, my closet, the bottom of my wardrobe. Ethan hovered in the hall until Vanessa snapped, “Go to your room.”
Then Adam found the necklace.
My sewing basket. Beneath thread spools and an unfinished hem.
I stared at it. Then at him.
“No.”
He looked sick. Vanessa looked satisfied.
For a moment I thought 40 years might still mean something.
“I didn’t put that there,” I said.
Vanessa folded her arms. “Then how did it get there?”
I stepped toward Adam. “Check the hallway traffic. Check who had access. Search everything again.”
Vanessa said, “Poor people always envy what they can’t have.”
I ignored her. “Adam. Look at me.”
He did. For a moment I thought 40 years might still mean something.
The police walked me out through the front garden.
Instead he said, quietly, “If you won’t tell us the truth, Clara, I’ll have no choice.”
That was worse than if he had yelled.
Ethan said from the hall, “She didn’t do it.”
Vanessa turned so fast it almost made me flinch. “Upstairs. Now.”
The police walked me out through the front garden while the neighbors watched from behind hedges and curtains. I kept my back straight. Humiliation feeds on spectacle. I would not give it more.
Vanessa arrived dressed as if she were grieving.
At the station, I repeated the same thing until my throat hurt: I did not take it. I did not touch it. Search whatever you like.
By the time the preliminary hearing came, my public defender had already decided what kind of case I was.
He leaned toward me and murmured, “A confession could reduce the damage.”
“I didn’t steal anything.”
“Then the court will need something better than your word.”
That was the shape of it. My word against hers.
Proceedings had barely begun when the courtroom door opened hard enough to echo.
Vanessa arrived dressed as if she were grieving. Adam sat beside her, pale and drawn. He had the look of a man who wanted a path back to innocence and had not found one.
Proceedings had barely begun when the courtroom door opened hard enough to echo.
Everyone turned.
It was Ethan, half in uniform, his schoolbag still over one shoulder. Behind him was the family driver, out of breath.
The bailiff moved, but my defender stood up fast and said, “Your Honor, the boy is the complainant’s stepson. If he has material evidence, the defense asks the court to hear him.”
He walked to the front and held out his hand.
The judge frowned. “Bring him forward.”
Vanessa rose halfway from her seat. “Ethan, sit down.”
He didn’t even look at her.
He walked to the front, breathing hard, and held out his hand. In it lay my old silver thimble.
My heart lurched.
“Sir,” he said, voice shaking, “Clara never touched Vanessa’s jewelry.”
Ethan turned toward her then.
The judge asked, “What is that?”
“It’s Clara’s thimble. From her sewing basket.” He swallowed. “I found it in Vanessa’s locked drawer. With a memory card.”
The whole room changed.
Vanessa said, too quickly, “That proves nothing.”
Ethan turned toward her then, and for the first time I saw something in him harder than fear.
“A few nights before the necklace was found, I woke up and saw you in the hall with the jewelry box.”
The judge held up a hand for silence.
Vanessa went still.
“I followed you,” he said. “You went into Clara’s room. You stood by the closet and put something in her sewing basket.”
Adam stood up. “Ethan-”
“You told me not to tell anyone,” Ethan said, still staring at Vanessa. “You said Clara was ruining everything.”
The judge held up a hand for silence.
Ethan’s voice wobbled, but he kept going. “I didn’t understand what I saw then. I only understood after Clara was taken away.”
“Do you know what is on that card?”
My defender asked gently, “And the card?”
Ethan nodded. “Later, Vanessa made me help her look for something in her dressing room. She left me there alone for a minute. I opened the top drawer because I saw Clara’s thimble. The memory card was underneath it.”
The judge said, “Do you know what is on that card?”
Ethan took a breath. “A video. She had a small motion camera hidden on the bookcase in the bedroom hall. It pointed toward Clara’s door. I think she kept it to watch who went in and out.”
The court clerk took the card.
Vanessa said sharply, “That’s a lie.”
Ethan flinched, then kept going. “I put the card in my schoolbag. I asked the IT teacher at lunch to help me open it because I said I’d found it. He played the file. It shows Vanessa going into Clara’s room carrying the jewelry box. When she comes out, she’s holding the thimble.”
The court clerk took the card. My defender looked like he’d been handed oxygen.
That was the clean break. Not drama. Proof.
That tin held letters from Adam’s mother.