ch work. Grandmother called them the ‘Widow’s Tears.’ Why?”
“It’s on Simone. In that photo.”
Vivian’s face turned to stone. She looked at my phone. When she lowered it, her face was gray.
“Yes, it’s it. No doubt.”
“But Father would never let her take Mother’s things!”
“He didn’t allow it,” Vivian said quietly, terrifying certainty in her voice. “Because he didn’t know where it was. That necklace went missing from her jewelry box on the day she died.” Pause. “Ten years ago. The very day Darius Vance first crossed the threshold of your factory. And the very day he now tells everyone his secret love for Simone began.”
The day of death. The day Darius appeared. The day the secret love began. Three points connecting into one ugly line.
“I need to go back,” I said. “To the apartment. There must be something else.”
I returned to the sanctuary, this time looking not for evidence but for a message. I searched every inch.
My gaze fell on my mother’s old gray coat by the door. I ran my hand over coarse wool, felt the lining. On the left side, near the chest, fabric felt denser. Something hard, rectangular, sewn inside.
With a kitchen knife, I carefully slit the lining. A small plump notebook in worn leather cover fell to the floor.
A diary.
The Last Entry
I opened the first page. Her journal of her last months. It revealed the entire horrible truth.
“August 15th: Elijah is furious. Simone’s bills from Miami. He yelled she would ruin him. But I saw he was angry at himself for not being able to deny her anything.”
“September 5th: I think Elijah found a solution. Dinner with that new logistics man, Darius Vance. Slippery type. All evening, Elijah praises Nia to him. I understood his plan. He wants to sell one daughter to save the other. God, the shame.”
“September 22nd: I overheard Elijah and Simone. Simone was laughing, ‘Dad, it’s genius. Why log spoiled goods as waste when we can donate them? We’ll get tax breaks and reputation of philanthropists.’ It was her idea. My daughter invented a way to poison orphans to pay for her dresses.”
Then the last entry, written on the day she died. Handwriting shaky, hurried.
“October 15th: That’s it. I can’t be silent anymore. This morning, I told Simone if she and Elijah didn’t confess everything and stop this scam by tonight, I would go to police. I showed her copies from my ledger. She was so calm, too calm. She said, ‘Fine, Mom, let’s talk tonight.’ She’s coming tonight. She’ll be here soon. I don’t know why, but I’m scared.”
The diary ended. My mother gave them an ultimatum, and they answered it.
As I was about to close it, I noticed something tucked into a pocket on the inside back cover: yellowed pharmacy receipt, dated two days before her death. Listed her powerful heart medication. At the bottom, note in her hand:
“Simone offered to pick up my new prescription herself. Said I shouldn’t bother. I don’t know why, but I’m afraid.”
Her heart attack was no accident. At best, criminal negligence. At worst, murder.
The fury I’d felt before was nothing. I was dealing with monsters.
“This changes everything,” Andre said after reading the diary. “This is no longer just fraud. It’s murder.”
“Police won’t help,” I said calmly. “City police chief is Father’s best friend.”
“Then what?”
“We make them confess. Publicly. Create a situation where silence is scarier than confession.”
The Trap
City posters announced the annual Founders’ Gala. Guest of honor: Elijah Hayes, receiving an award for contribution to “family values.” He planned to officially announce Darius as his successor. His final, triumphant victory.
“This is our stage,” Andre said.
I knew the weak link: Calvin. I met him after his shift.