PART 2
The Photograph He Never Wanted Me to See
The photograph filled my phone screen while the transfer page waited behind it, patient and bright, as if money and marriage and betrayal could all be handled with the same clean click.
At first, I could not understand what I was seeing.
It was Lucas, unmistakably Lucas, standing in front of a pale stucco building beneath a row of palm trees. He wore sunglasses, a linen shirt I had never seen before, and the relaxed half smile he used when he thought someone was admiring him.
Beside him stood Melanie Harper.
Her hand rested lightly over the curve of her stomach.
But it was not Melanie who made my breath catch.
It was the elderly woman standing on Lucas’s other side.
My mother.
For a moment, the room seemed to tilt. I gripped the edge of the desk, staring at the woman in the photograph as if concentration might turn her into someone else.
But no. The silver bob, the coral scarf, the small gold pin shaped like a hummingbird at her collar. It was my mother, Evelyn, smiling politely into the camera beside the husband who had just lied his way through an airport goodbye.
My mother had been dead for six years.
I sat down slowly.
The message above the photo glowed with quiet menace.
He hasn’t told you everything.
My first thought was impossible. My second was worse.
The photograph could have been old, altered, staged, stolen from somewhere. But Lucas and Melanie looked recent. The date stamp in the corner read March 14. Barely three weeks ago.
My mouth went dry.
I tapped the unknown number with my thumb and typed, Who is this?
The reply came almost immediately.
Someone who thought you deserved the truth.
I stared at those words until they blurred.
What truth? I wrote.
Three dots appeared. Vanished. Appeared again.
Your husband did not choose Palm Springs by accident. Ask him about Desert Vista Holdings. Ask him why your mother’s signature is on the paperwork.
My skin prickled.
Desert Vista Holdings.
The name meant nothing to me, yet it landed heavily, like a key dropped into a lock.
I opened a browser and typed it in.
A sparse business listing appeared. Desert Vista Holdings, LLC. Real estate investment. Registered in California. I clicked through page after page, my thoughts racing ahead of my eyes. Then I found a public filing.
The registered agent was Lucas Grant.
My husband.
The formation date was nearly five years earlier.
I leaned back, pressing my hand over my mouth.
Five years. Lucas had created a company one year after my mother died, while I was still sorting through her house, still sleeping with lights on because grief made the dark feel too large.
I remembered him then. Patient Lucas. Helpful Lucas. The man who brought me tea and held me through nights when I woke crying. The man who said, “Let me deal with the financial details, Anne. You’ve been through enough.”
He had seemed like mercy.
Now I wondered what else mercy had hidden.
The transfer page still waited on my laptop.
$720,000.00
My finger moved toward confirmation again, then stopped.
If Lucas had been planning this for weeks, even months, the savings might only be the surface. The photograph said there was something older underneath. Something involving my mother. Something that might vanish forever if I acted too quickly and alerted him.
I closed the transfer window without moving a cent.
Not because I had forgiven him.
Because suddenly, I needed to know what he had done before I decided how to stop him.
My phone buzzed again.
Do not call him. Do not confront him. Go to the cedar box in your guest room closet.
My heart began to pound.
There was a cedar box in the guest room closet.
It had belonged to my mother.
After she died, I had packed away the things I could not bear to sort through: letters, recipes, a shawl that still faintly smelled of lavender, and a small stack of journals tied with ribbon. I had not opened the box in years.
How would a stranger know?
Who are you? I typed again.
This time, no answer came.
The house felt different as I walked upstairs. Not empty, exactly. Watched.
The guest room was neat, sunlit, untouched except for the faint impression of Lucas’s suitcase on the rug from the night before. He had packed with such calm precision, folding shirts for Zurich while his real life waited in California.
I opened the closet.
The cedar box sat on the top shelf behind winter blankets.
I dragged a chair over, pulled it down, and set it on the bed. Dust clung to the lid. My hands trembled now, not with fear of Lucas, but with fear of my mother’s voice waiting inside.
The hinges creaked.
Lavender rose into the room.
For several seconds, I only looked. There were the journals. The shawl. Her reading glasses. A photo of us at my college graduation, both of us squinting into sunlight. Beneath the shawl sat a sealed envelope I did not remember.
My name was written across it.
Anne.
Not Mom’s handwriting.
Lucas’s.
The envelope had already been opened and resealed badly, the flap wrinkled where someone had lifted it with steam or patience.
Inside were three pages.
The first was a photocopy of my mother’s will. I knew it well, or thought I did. Her house had been sold. Her savings had come to me. Her investment account had become part of the inheritance Lucas later persuaded me to merge into our joint savings.
The second page was different.
It was an addendum.
A codicil.
I read the first paragraph twice before the meaning reached me.
My mother had left me an interest in a parcel of land outside Palm Springs, held through a family trust I had never heard of. Not huge, not flashy, but valuable enough that developers had apparently made offers for years.
The third page was a letter.
My dearest Anne,
If you are reading this, I hope it is because I was brave enough to tell you everything myself. If I was not, forgive me. There are mistakes a mother makes believing silence is protection, only to discover silence has teeth.
I sat down on the edge of the bed.
The letter shook in my hands.
Your father was not the careful man you remember from stories. Before he left us, he invested in land with people I did not trust. I kept the property because selling it meant reopening doors I wanted closed. Lucas knows about it because I asked him, before my surgery, to help me find the old trust documents. I thought he was doing it for you.
A small sound escaped me.
My mother had surgery eight months before she died. I remembered Lucas driving her to appointments when I had work meetings. I remembered feeling grateful. I remembered him telling me not to worry, that he was happy to help.
The letter continued.
There is another copy of the trust file with Miriam Vale, my attorney. If anything happens before I explain this properly, speak to Miriam. Do not sign anything Lucas brings you unless she reviews it first. I like your husband, sweetheart, but liking a man is not the same as knowing him.
Miriam Vale.
I had heard the name once, maybe twice. My mother had called her “an old friend from before Denver.”
The letter ended simply.
You have always been stronger than you believe. Trust that strength before you trust anyone else’s certainty.
Love,
Mom
I lowered the page to my lap.
For six years, this letter had been in my house.
Lucas had found it.
Lucas had opened it.
Lucas had hidden it again, trusting that grief would keep me away.
Downstairs, my phone rang.
The sound sliced through the stillness.
Lucas.
His name appeared on the screen with a photograph from our fifth anniversary: him laughing, me leaning into him, both of us golden in candlelight. A version of us that suddenly looked like a painting hung over a cracked wall.
I let it ring.
It stopped.
A message appeared.
Landed safely. Already miss you. Zurich is beautiful from the air.
I almost laughed then. Not because anything was funny, but because the lie was so clumsy now that it seemed impossible it had once held power over me.
I typed back, Glad you landed. Get some rest.
The response came quickly.
You okay? You sounded so upset at the airport.
I looked at the cedar box, the letter, the photograph.
Just tired, I wrote. I love you.
My thumb hovered before I sent it.
The words felt different this time. Not like surrender. Like bait.
His reply arrived with three red hearts.
I placed the phone face down.
Then I searched for Miriam Vale.
She was still practicing law.
Her office was in a brick building in Boulder, wedged between a bakery and an art gallery. I called from the guest room floor, Mom’s letter spread beside me like evidence in a quiet trial.
A receptionist answered.
When I gave my name, there was a pause.
“Anne Grant?” she asked.
“Yes.”
Another pause.
“One moment, please.”
Soft classical music filled the line. I looked around the room at the framed prints Lucas had chosen, the neutral quilt he had ordered because my old one was “too sentimental,” the closet where my mother’s warning had been tucked away in darkness.
Then an older woman’s voice came on.
“Anne?”
“Yes.”
“This is Miriam Vale.” Her voice softened. “I have been hoping you would call someday.”
My throat tightened.
“You knew?”
“I knew your mother left instructions. I also knew she was afraid she might not have time to explain them.”
“Why didn’t you contact me?”
“I tried,” Miriam said. “Twice. Letters were returned. Then your husband called and said you were too devastated to handle estate complications and asked that all communication go through him temporarily.”
I closed my eyes.
“Did you agree?”
“No,” she said firmly. “But he was very persuasive, and by the time I insisted on speaking with you directly, you had moved.”
Lucas had insisted we sell my townhouse after Mom died. He said it had too many memories. He said a new house would help us heal.
I had believed him.
“Mrs. Vale,” I said, struggling to keep my voice steady, “what is Desert Vista Holdings?”
Silence.
Then Miriam exhaled.
“I think you should come to my office.”
“I need to know now.”
“You own forty percent of the land Desert Vista is trying to acquire,” she said. “Or rather, you should. Your mother’s share passed to you automatically. Without your consent, the property cannot be fully sold.”
My hand tightened around the phone.
“Lucas is the registered agent.”
“I discovered that recently.”
“How recently?”
“Yesterday.”
I stood.
“Yesterday?”
“A title researcher called my office to verify an old signature. Something felt wrong. I began reviewing the file this morning.”
The unknown number. The photograph. The warning.
“Did you text me?” I asked.
“No.”
“Do you know Melanie Harper?”
Another pause.
“No. Should I?”
“She’s with Lucas.”
“I see.”
There was no judgment in Miriam’s voice, only a careful rearranging of facts.
“What signature were they verifying?” I asked.
“Yours.”
My breath stopped.
“I never signed anything.”
“I know,” Miriam said quietly. “That is why you need to come here.”
By four o’clock, I was sitting across from Miriam Vale in an office that smelled faintly of paper, coffee, and rain, though the sky outside was clear. She was in her seventies, elegant in a navy suit, with sharp eyes and silver hair pinned at the nape of her neck.
She placed a folder between us.
“I am sorry, Anne.”
People had been saying that to me for years. Sorry about your mother. Sorry about the timing. Sorry life is complicated. But Miriam said it as if apology had weight.
Inside the folder was a purchase agreement.
My name appeared on the signature line.
Anne Grant.
The signature looked like mine at a glance. The slope was close. The loop in the G nearly right. But I knew immediately it was wrong. Too careful. Too practiced. My real signature moved faster, impatient at the end.
“Who submitted this?” I asked.
“Desert Vista’s attorney.”
“Lucas has an attorney?”
“Apparently.”
I read the agreement. Desert Vista Holdings was purchasing multiple interests in the Palm Springs land for development. Condominiums. Retail space. Private amenities. The kind of desert luxury Lucas liked to mock in public and admire in secret.
The price listed for my share made my stomach twist.
Two million dollars.
Not potential value. Not future estimate. Purchase price.
Lucas had not only planned to steal our savings.
He had planned to sell something my mother left me, using my forged signature, then disappear into a new life before I knew the property existed.
Miriam watched me carefully.
“I need you to listen,” she said. “This is not only about betrayal. It is about documents. Timelines. Proof. If you confront him emotionally, he may destroy evidence or adjust the story.”
“I don’t want revenge,” I said.
The words surprised me because they were true.
I wanted the room to stop spinning. I wanted my mother’s voice back. I wanted the years returned, the ones when Lucas sat across from me at breakfast and smiled over coffee while building secret exits behind my life.
Miriam nodded.
“Then we proceed cleanly.”
For the next hour, she explained what could be done. File notice disputing the signature. Freeze any transfer connected to the land. Alert the bank to require dual verification on withdrawals. Preserve emails, texts, and account records. Speak to a family attorney before Lucas realized I knew.
“I have access to the savings account,” I said. “I almost moved everything.”
“I understand why. But do not empty it without advice. Protect it, yes. Panic can make clean hands look complicated.”
Clean hands.
The phrase steadied me.
I called the bank from Miriam’s office. My voice sounded strange to my own ears, polite and calm, as I requested restrictions, alerts, and in-person authorization for large withdrawals. The banker asked if there was suspected fraud.
I looked at Miriam.
“Yes,” I said. “There may be.”
Afterward, Miriam copied my mother’s letter and locked the original in her office safe. She gave me a plain folder to take home and the number of a family attorney named Daniel Cho.
As I stood to leave, she hesitated.
“There is one more thing.”
I turned back.
“Your mother came to see me two weeks before she died,” Miriam said. “She was agitated. She said she had changed her mind about Lucas.”
My throat tightened.
“Why?”
“She would not give details. She only said, ‘He asks questions like a man measuring curtains in a house he doesn’t own.’”
Tears rose before I could stop them.
That sounded exactly like Mom.
“Did she think he hurt her?”
Miriam’s expression changed, not dramatically, but enough.
“No,” she said. “Not physically. But she believed he had found something in the trust records. Something he wanted.”
“What?”
“I don’t know.”
The late afternoon light had faded by the time I reached home. The house was shadowed and cool. For the first time since Lucas left, I noticed all the things that were his choices: the gray sofa, the glass dining table, the abstract art that looked expensive and said nothing.
I set Miriam’s folder on the kitchen island.
My phone buzzed again.
Lucas.
How’s my brave girl?
I stared at the phrase.
He had called me that after Mom’s funeral. After we sold my townhouse. After I agreed to merge the inheritance. My brave girl. It had once sounded tender. Now it sounded like a hand pressing lightly between my shoulders, guiding me exactly where he wanted me to go.
I wrote, Missing you. How’s the hotel?
A pause.
Beautiful. Long day tomorrow. Lots of meetings.
Send a picture?
The typing dots appeared, vanished, appeared again.
Of what?
Your view.
Several minutes passed.
Then a photograph arrived.
A city skyline at dusk. Water. Mountains. Elegant buildings under a lavender sky.
Zurich, he wrote.
I opened the image details.
No location data.
Of course.
But he had made one mistake.
In the reflection of the hotel window, faint but visible, stood a woman behind him holding a phone.
Melanie.
I saved the photo.
Then I texted the unknown number again.
I found the letter. Who are you?
This time, the reply came after nearly ten minutes.
Meet me tomorrow. Union Station. 10 a.m. Under the clock.
I should have been afraid.
Instead, I felt the strange steadiness that comes when fear has already spent itself. I had spent years imagining disasters I could not name. Now one had a shape. A paper trail. A clock to stand under.
That night, I slept in the guest room beside the cedar box.
At two in the morning, I woke with a memory so vivid it felt like someone had spoken aloud.
Mom, sitting at my kitchen table, months before she died. Lucas in the study, supposedly on a call. Mom lowering her voice and saying, “Promise me you’ll keep something that is only yours.”
I had laughed gently.
“I have plenty that’s mine.”
She had looked toward the study door.
“That isn’t what I mean.”
At the time, I thought illness had made her anxious.
Now I wondered whether she had been warning me in the only way she could.
Union Station was bright and busy the next morning, filled with commuters, tourists, and the smell of coffee. I stood under the clock with Miriam’s folder tucked in my bag and my phone in my hand.
At exactly ten, a young man approached.
He looked no older than twenty-five, with dark hair, tired eyes, and a messenger bag slung across his chest.
“Anne Grant?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“My name is Theo.”
I waited.
He swallowed. “Theo Harper.”
The last name moved through me like a cold thread.
“Melanie’s brother?”
He nodded.
I took a step back.
“I’m not here to defend her,” he said quickly. “I’m here because she’s scared.”
“Of Lucas?”
“Of what she signed.”
We moved to a quiet corner near the old wooden benches. Theo’s hands fidgeted with the strap of his bag.
“Melanie didn’t know about you at first,” he said.
“She knew enough eventually.”
His face colored.
“Yes.”
The honesty disarmed me more than excuses would have.
“She thought Lucas was separated,” Theo continued. “Then she learned you weren’t. By then she was pregnant, and he had her convinced everything was almost over, that you were fragile, that telling you too soon would ruin you.”
I looked away.
Fragile. Brave girl. Too devastated.
Lucas had built a language around my grief and used it as camouflage.
“Why contact me?” I asked.
Theo opened his bag and pulled out a thin laptop.
“Because last week, I heard him arguing with someone on the phone. He said your signature would pass if no one panicked. Melanie started asking questions. He told her it was business, that you had agreed quietly because of tax reasons.”
“And she believed him?”
“She wanted to.”
There it was. Not cruelty. Not innocence. Something more human and more painful. Wanting to believe the version of someone that made your choices bearable.
Theo turned the laptop toward me.
“Then she found this.”
On the screen was a scanned document: an email from Lucas to Melanie.
Subject: Timing.
Mel,
Once Zurich story is active, Anne will be emotionally occupied. Bank movement should be staged over several months. Desert Vista closing will give us room to breathe. Do not mention the trust again, especially not around Theo.
L
I read it once.
Then again.
Emotionally occupied.
The phrase was so bloodless that my anger became almost quiet.
“Why didn’t Melanie come herself?” I asked.
Theo’s jaw tightened.
“She had a doctor’s appointment. And Lucas watches her phone.”
The answer hung between us.
Not because it excused anything.
Because it complicated everything.
Theo slid a small envelope across the bench.
“She asked me to give you this.”
Inside was a note written in rounded handwriting.
Anne,
I do not expect you to forgive me. I do not forgive myself yet. I believed things I should have questioned because believing them let me keep the future I wanted. But I found out yesterday that Lucas has been using my name, too. The condo lease is not just a lease. He put Desert Vista expenses through accounts connected to me. I am sending what I have through Theo because I am afraid if I confront him, everything disappears.
There is something else. Lucas keeps a storage unit in Denver. I saw the key once. It has a blue tag and the number 418. He said it held old tax files.
I think it holds things that belong to you.
Melanie
I folded the note slowly.
When I looked up, Theo was watching me with anxious expectation, as if I might decide his sister’s fate in the middle of a train station.
“I can’t help her before I understand what he did to me,” I said.
“I know.”
“But I won’t ignore evidence.”
Relief flickered across his face.
“That’s all she hoped.”
I asked him to forward everything to Miriam and Daniel Cho, the attorney I had called at seven that morning after barely sleeping. Theo agreed, then hesitated.
“There’s one more thing. The photo I sent you.”
“My mother.”
He nodded.
“Melanie found it in Lucas’s desk. She thought it was strange because of the date stamp.”
“It’s impossible.”
“I know,” Theo said. “But Lucas wrote something on the back.”
He took out his phone and showed me another image.
The back of the photograph.
In Lucas’s handwriting were four words.
Evelyn knew about Clara.
I felt the station noise fall away.
“Who is Clara?” Theo asked.
I could not answer.
Because I did not know.
By noon, I was sitting in Daniel Cho’s office, retelling the story from the airport onward while he took careful notes. Daniel was younger than Miriam, maybe early forties, with a calm manner and the kind of listening that made interruption unnecessary.
When I finished, he removed his glasses.
“Your priority is protection,” he said. “Financial, legal, emotional. We notify parties quietly. We preserve records. We do not give Lucas a reason to rush.”
“I want to go to the storage unit.”
“I expected that.”
“And?”
“And you should not go alone.”
So at three that afternoon, I stood beside Daniel in the office of a storage facility on the edge of Denver, watching a bored clerk search the system.
“Unit 418,” Daniel said. “Rented under Lucas Grant.”
The clerk shook her head.
“No Lucas Grant.”
My stomach sank.
“Try Desert Vista Holdings,” Daniel said.
The clerk typed.
Nothing.
Then I remembered the photograph.
“Try Evelyn Mercer.”
My mother’s maiden name.
The clerk typed again.
Her expression changed.
“Unit 418. Paid through next month.”
For a moment, I forgot how to breathe.
Daniel glanced at me.
“Is there a key?”
I opened my palm.
Theo had given it to me before we parted. Blue tag. 418.
The hallway smelled of concrete and dust. Our footsteps echoed softly as we passed rows of orange doors. At unit 418, I slid the key into the lock.
It turned.
Inside were boxes.
Dozens of them.
Some labeled in Lucas’s neat handwriting. Taxes. Old files. Denver house. Others were unlabeled. Against the back wall stood a small wooden filing cabinet I recognized instantly.
It had been in my mother’s bedroom.
Lucas told me we donated it.
I crossed the unit slowly, feeling as though I had entered a room buried beneath my own life. Daniel stayed by the door, giving me space.
The first box held bank statements from my inheritance account. The second held copies of my mother’s medical bills. The third contained photographs, letters, and journals I thought had been lost during the move.
My anger faltered.
Grief rushed in behind it.
I picked up one of Mom’s journals and pressed it to my chest. For years, I had blamed myself for misplacing these things. Lucas had comforted me through that guilt.
He had comforted me for a wound he made.
Daniel opened the filing cabinet with gloved hands from his briefcase. Inside were folders arranged by date.
At the front was one labeled Clara.
My fingers went cold.
Daniel looked at me.
“Do you want me to open it?”
“No,” I whispered. “I will.”
The folder contained a birth certificate.
Name: Clara Rose Mercer.
Mother: Evelyn Mercer.
Father: Unlisted.
Date of birth: May 3, 1989.
I stared at the page.
I was born in 1988.
Clara Rose Mercer was born eleven months after me.
My mother had another daughter.
A sister.
The unit seemed to shrink around me.
There were hospital records, adoption forms, letters addressed but never mailed. I read only fragments, enough for the truth to arrange itself in pieces. My mother had given birth to Clara during a period she had described to me only as “the hardest year.” Clara had been adopted privately by a family in California. Palm Springs.
My knees weakened.
Daniel guided me to a stack of boxes and let me sit.
“Anne?”
“My mother had another child,” I said.
His face softened.
“I’m sorry.”
I shook my head. “Lucas knew.”
The photograph. Evelyn knew about Clara.
Maybe he had found the adoption records while helping Mom. Maybe he had connected Clara to the land trust. Maybe Clara owned another share.
I opened the next document.
It was a recent private investigator report.
Subject: Clara Rose Mercer, now Clara Bennett.
Current residence: Palm Springs, California.
Occupation: elementary school music teacher.
Marital status: widowed.
There was a photograph paper-clipped to the report.
A woman in her mid-thirties stood outside a school, holding a violin case, smiling at a child just outside the frame. She had my mother’s eyes.
And mine.
For the first time since the airport, I cried without controlling it.
Not loudly. Not dramatically. Just tears slipping down my face as the room blurred.
Lucas had not only hidden money.
He had hidden family.
Daniel waited until I could speak.
“We need to take this folder,” he said gently. “Miriam should see it.”
I nodded.
As we gathered the documents, my phone buzzed.
Lucas again.
Missed your voice today. Call tonight?
I looked at the message, then at Clara’s photograph.
A strange calm settled over me.
Not cold this time.
Clear.
I wrote back, I’d like that. There’s something I want to ask you.
His reply came seconds later.
Anything, my brave girl.
I placed the phone in my bag.
Daniel locked the storage unit behind us. Outside, the sky had turned the deep blue that comes just before evening. Cars moved along the road, ordinary and untroubled. Somewhere, people were buying groceries, picking up children, deciding what to cook for dinner.
My life had cracked open, yet the world continued.
At home, I spread the Clara folder across the dining table. The house no longer felt like Lucas’s carefully arranged stage. It felt like a place being reclaimed, inch by inch, document by document, memory by memory.
Miriam called at seven.
“I reviewed Theo’s files,” she said. “Anne, this is larger than I thought. Clara Bennett owns thirty percent of the same land trust.”
“Does she know?”
“I doubt it.”
“Lucas knows.”
“Yes.”
There was a pause.
“Miriam?”
“Yes?”
“Why would he need Melanie?”
“Possibly because of financing. Possibly because of access. Possibly because she was useful in Palm Springs.”
Useful.
The word made me tired.
After we hung up, I sat in the darkening dining room and opened one of Mom’s old journals. Near the back, on a page dated two weeks before her death, she had written:
Lucas asked about Clara again today. Too casually. He knows enough to be dangerous, but not enough to understand what he has touched.
Below that, in shakier handwriting:
I must tell Anne before he finds her.
Her.
Clara.
I looked at the final word until the ink seemed to move.
At nine, Lucas called.
I let it ring twice before answering.
“Hi,” I said.
“There she is.” His voice was warm, easy, intimate. “I was starting to think you forgot me.”
“Never.”
“How was your day?”
I looked at my mother’s journal.
“Strange.”
“Strange how?”
“I went through some of Mom’s things.”
Silence, brief but sharp.
“Oh?”
“I found old letters.”
“What kind of letters?”
His voice had changed. Barely. But I heard it.
“Family things,” I said. “It made me miss her.”
He exhaled softly, performing tenderness so well I might have believed it yesterday.
“I know, sweetheart. Grief sneaks up.”
“Yes,” I said. “It does.”
For a few seconds, neither of us spoke.
Then I asked, “Lucas, did my mother ever mention someone named Clara?”
The silence that followed was not brief.
It was vast.
When he spoke again, his voice was careful.
“Clara?”
“Yes.”
“No. Why?”
I closed my eyes.
There it was. The smallest possible answer. The safest lie.
“I saw the name in an old journal.”
“Your mom wrote a lot of things when she was sick,” he said gently. “You know that.”
“She wasn’t confused.”
“I didn’t say she was.”
“But you thought it.”
“No, Anne. I’m just worried about you digging through painful memories alone.”
My brave girl. Emotionally occupied. Fragile.
“I’m okay,” I said.
“Are you sure? Maybe wait until I’m back to go through the rest.”
“When will that be?”
A pause.
“What do you mean?”
“From Zurich.”
He laughed lightly.
“Well, not soon. You know that.”
“Right.”
“Anne,” he said, softer now, “promise me you won’t upset yourself with old boxes.”
I looked across the table at Clara Bennett’s photograph.
“I won’t promise that.”
His breathing shifted.
“Why are you being like this?”
The question was so familiar that sadness moved through me before anger could. How many times had he made my unease sound like a flaw? How many times had I retreated because I wanted peace more than proof?
“I’m just asking questions,” I said.
“Some questions don’t help.”
“Maybe they do.”
Another silence.
Then he said, “I love you.”
I almost answered automatically.
Instead, I said, “Goodnight, Lucas.”
I ended the call before he could respond.
For a long time, I sat without moving.
Then my phone lit again.
Not Lucas.
Unknown number.
I opened the message.
It was not from Theo this time. Not the same wording, not the same rhythm.
Mrs. Grant, my name is Clara Bennett. I was told you might contact me, but I cannot wait. Lucas Grant came to my house tonight. He said he was your attorney. He said my sister Anne had died six years ago.
Attached beneath the message was a photograph.
Lucas standing on Clara’s porch, smiling into her doorbell camera.
And in his hand was my mother’s cedar box.
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