My father’s deep, resonant voice cut through the air. He had stepped into the living room. His coat was damp from the light drizzle outside, and his eyes immediately locked onto the television screen, then dropped to my mother’s limp body, and finally settled on me.
My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. With a trembling finger, I subtly pressed the volume button on the side of my phone, muttering into the receiver, “I… I have to go, Mom is hurt,” before cutting the call and slipping the device into my pocket. I hoped against hope that my sister had understood the cue to hang up.
“She fainted,” I stammered, my voice sounding hollow and alien to my own ears. “The news… Dad, the news just showed…”
My father didn’t look at the television. He didn’t look shocked, or grieving, or confused. His face was a mask of absolute, chilling serenity. He walked over, knelt beside my mother, and checked her pulse with two practiced fingers.
“She always had a weak heart,” he said quietly, his tone entirely devoid of the warmth he usually carried. He stood up, towering over me. “The media lies, son. They twist things. They find broken people and put words in their mouths to destroy good families. You know who I am. You know what we lost.”
For seven years, I would have believed him. I would have nodded, wiped my tears, and let him take charge. But tonight, I had seen my sister’s eyes. I had heard her voice on the phone.
“I called an ambulance,” I lied, backing away slightly toward the kitchen counter where the car keys usually sat. “They’re on their way.”
My father’s eyes narrowed slightly. It was a microscopic shift, but the air in the room instantly grew cold. “There is no need for that. I will take her to the hospital myself. Go to your room.”
“But Dad—”
“Go to your room,” he repeated. It wasn’t a request. It was the same authoritative command he had used seven years ago when he told us to stop asking questions about the urn.
He bent down to lift my mother into his arms. The moment his back was turned, my hand swept across the kitchen counter. My fingers wrapped around the cold metal of my car keys. I didn’t think. I didn’t plan. If he left this house with my mother, or if he realized I knew where my sister was, we would all become ghosts.
I bolted out the side door into the pouring rain.
The drive to the abandoned mill was a blur of blinding headlights and sweeping windshield wipers. The storm had intensified, turning the narrow, winding dirt roads into treacherous rivers of mud. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white.
Every few seconds, I glanced at the rearview mirror, terrified of seeing the high beams of my father’s heavy SUV looming behind me. He knew the county roads better than anyone. If he realized I had fled toward the state line, he would catch up to me in minutes.
The phone in my cup holder buzzed. The screen lit up with another unknown number. I pressed speakerphone with a shaking hand.
“Are you on your way?” my sister gasped. The sound of rain echoing against a wooden structure was audible in the background. “You need to hurry. I think someone else is out here. I heard a car engine a few minutes ago.”
“I’m driving as fast as I can,” I yelled over the roar of the storm. “But what did you mean on the phone earlier? Who is in that grave? We buried you! The police ran DNA tests, they said it was a match!”
A bitter, broken laugh came through the speaker. “The police? Who do you think helped him cover it up? Dad didn’t just kidnap me, he orchestrated the entire thing. The girl in that grave… she was a runaway. Someone nobody would miss. Dad used his connections to swap the dental records. He needed a body so everyone would stop looking for me. He wanted a funeral so he could mourn a tragedy instead of being hunted as a monster.”
My stomach plummeted. The grief that had consumed my mother for nearly a decade, the tears, the hollowed-out family dynamic—it was all a beautifully constructed theater production, directed by the man we called father.
“Why?” I choked out. “Why did he do this to you?”
“Because I found his ledger,” she whispered, her voice cracked with old, deep-seated terror. “I found out where his money really came from. The charities, the political donations… it was all laundered. When I threatened to go to the authorities, he didn’t just lock me away to punish me. He did it to keep his empire alive. And if he finds me now… he will make sure the second funeral is real.”



