The house was unusually silent that evening, the kind of silence that presses on your ears until you start hearing your own heartbeat. I stood in the hallway, listening to the soft hum of the refrigerator and the occasional creak of the old floorboards. Natalie and Andrew had gone to their rooms early, claiming exhaustion. I didn’t believe either of them. They weren’t tired. They were waiting. For what, I didn’t know.
I took a slow breath and stepped toward Richard’s office.
The door gave a faint squeak when I pushed it open. The room smelled like old paper and cedar polish, the same scent that had always clung to Richard’s jackets. I flipped on the small desk lamp, and a warm pool of yellow light spread over the mahogany surface. Everything looked untouched—too untouched, as if someone had made a point to leave it that way.
My fingers trembled as I reached for the top drawer. Locked, just like always. But I knew where Richard hid the spare key. Behind the framed photo of us from our first trip to Montana, tucked between the backing and the frame.
The key slipped easily into the lock.
The drawer opened with a soft click.
I dug under the folders, running my hand along the underside until my fingertips brushed a thin wooden ridge—the hidden panel from the picture. My breath caught. Carefully, I pushed against it. It popped loose.
Inside was a black envelope, thick and sealed.
For a moment, I just stared at it. My heart drummed in my ears. This was it—the thing someone had risked breaking into my home to show me. The thing Richard had hidden from everyone, including our children.
I slid a finger under the seal and opened it.
Inside were two items: a letter and a small flash drive.
My eyes darted to the doorway, half expecting to see Andrew standing there, watching. But the hallway was empty.
Hands shaking, I opened the letter.
“If you’re reading this, it means things have gone wrong.”
I sank into the chair.
“The will Natalie found isn’t mine. Someone forced it. Someone close. I’ve been followed for weeks. If anything happens to me, don’t trust the first story you hear. Use the drive. And whatever you do, protect yourself.”
It was signed simply, Richard.
A tremor went through my whole body. None of this made sense. Richard being followed? A forged will? And who would force him—our own children?
No. Not them. They could be selfish, impatient, even careless… but capable of this?
A floorboard creaked in the hallway.
I froze.
Another creak. Slow. Controlled.
Someone was awake.
I slipped the flash drive into my pocket and folded the letter back into the envelope. The office door was still half-open. I snuffed the lamp and waited in the darkness, barely daring to breathe. My pulse beat at the base of my throat.
A shadow moved past the doorway.
It paused.
I pressed a hand over my mouth.
The shadow lingered, then continued down the hallway. A moment later, a door closed softly—Andrew’s room.
Only then did I allow myself to exhale.
I couldn’t stay in the house. Not with that letter. Not with those footsteps.
I grabbed my coat and the black envelope, slipped quietly through the kitchen, and stepped outside. The cold Seattle air hit me like a bucket of ice water. I hurried to the car, scanning the street. Everything looked normal, calm, peaceful—but my instincts screamed otherwise.
Inside the car, I locked the doors and pulled out the flash drive. I had no laptop with me, but I knew where I could get help. Richard’s old friend, Mark Lewis, lived across the city. He’d always been the one Richard trusted with the tough stuff—taxes, investments, anything involving money. If someone knew how to make sense of this mess, it was him.
The drive through the rain felt endless. Stoplights blurred into streaks of red and gold. My mind kept circling the same questions—Who sent those messages? Who forged the will? And if Richard truly was alive… why hide from his own family?
By the time I pulled into Mark’s driveway, my hands were numb from gripping the wheel.
He opened the door in his flannel robe, blinking in surprise.
“Sarah? What on earth—are you alright?”
“No,” I whispered. “And I don’t think Richard died the way they said.”
His face went pale.
Inside, under the soft glow of the kitchen light, he plugged the flash drive into his laptop. Files loaded instantly—bank statements, emails, scans of contracts. And at the bottom, a folder titled Proof.
Mark clicked it open.
I leaned in.
The first document was a scanned signature comparison—Richard’s real signature and a forged one. The forged one matched the will Natalie had handed me.
My knees buckled, and I gripped the counter.
Mark looked at me, voice low.
“Sarah… whoever did this knew exactly what they were doing.”
A wave of cold washed through me.
My children were sleeping in my house.
And one of them had rewritten their father’s will.
I straightened slowly, a strange calm settling over me.
“Mark, I need you to help me do something.”
He nodded. “Anything.”
“I’m going to finish what Richard started. And I’m not stopping until I know everything.”
The rain hammered harder against the windows, as if urging me on.
Tonight had taken everything I thought I knew and torn it apart.
But for the first time since Richard’s death, I felt something stronger than fear.
I felt determination.