saying Tyler had gone down for a nap and never woken up right.
By the time Ellie arrived, the volunteer EMTs were already there.
Michelle had been hysterical.
Brian had looked like a man who’d fallen through ice.
There had been no autopsy.
Michelle had said the county doctor believed it was a sudden seizure or hidden heart problem, one of those terrible things families never see coming until the worst has already happened.
Brian had signed the release for immediate burial because, through tears, Michelle had begged him not to let strangers cut into the boy’s body.
Ellie had thought grief was talking.
Now she wasn’t sure what had been talking at all.
“Did you see anything else?” Ellie asked.
Tyler licked dry lips.
“I heard them.”
“Who?”
“Michelle.
And Dad.”
The clock over the stove ticked once.
Twice.
“What did they say?”
Tyler’s eyes went glossy, but he kept speaking.
“Dad said, ‘This is wrong.’ He was whispering.
Michelle told him we were out of time.
She said once I was gone, the money would come through, and you wouldn’t be able to stop it.”
Ellie sat so still she could hear her own pulse.
Leah’s settlement.
A hundred and eighty thousand dollars, most of it protected in a trust with strict rules.
Brian could use some for Tyler’s education and care, but only with oversight.
Ellie had been named alternate trustee if anything happened or if there was ever cause for review.
Michelle had hated that from the day she learned it.
Three weeks earlier, Ellie had received a polite call from the attorney who handled the trust.
Michelle had been asking questions she had no authority to ask.
Ellie had confronted Brian gently over coffee, and Brian had looked embarrassed, then defensive, then angry in the way weak men do when shame gets too close.
He had insisted it was nothing.
Michelle was “just trying to understand the paperwork.”
Now Tyler was telling her Michelle had spoken about money while he lay half-drugged in the next room.
Ellie rose and went to the counter because sitting still felt impossible.
She kept one hand on the laminate edge until the shaking in her legs eased.
“Tyler, listen to me very carefully.
Are you saying Michelle put you to sleep on purpose?”
He nodded once.
“I heard her say if I told you what I saw, everything would be ruined.”
Ellie turned back.
“What did you see?”
Tyler looked ashamed, which broke her heart even further.
“I saw papers with my name on them in her purse.
A lot of them.
And I heard her yelling at Dad about the house money.
I told her I was gonna ask you what they meant.”
There it was.
Not a monster’s motive.
Something meaner and smaller and more believable.
Debt.
Panic.
Greed dressed up as survival.
Ellie reached for the phone mounted beside the fridge, then stopped.
Calling the house line felt absurd.
So did dialing 911 without another adult in the room who could see this with their own eyes.
In a small town, news traveled faster than sirens.
If Michelle was involved, Ellie wanted witnesses before she wanted noise.
She took out her cell and called Walt Kerr, the retired deputy who lived two streets over and had
