“And then,” Brandon continued, “she disappears from Phoenix.”
He slid another article across the desk.
A real estate developer. James Worthington. Dead during routine surgery.
Surgeon: Julian Mercer.
The photo of the widow stopped my heart.
Different hair. Same face.
“That’s Nicole,” I whispered.
“Rachel Stone,” Brandon said. “Collected millions. Vanished.”
The pieces slammed together in my head with sickening clarity.
“They killed him,” I said.
“They likely did,” Brandon replied. “And they learned from it.”
I stared at the desk, at the years of my life collapsing into a single horrifying realization.
“This was planned,” I said. “From the beginning.”
Brandon nodded.
“And now they’re planning again.”
The words didn’t scare me the way they should have.
They focused me.
“They’re not touching my daughter,” I said. “Not ever.”
Brandon’s eyes sharpened. “Then we set a trap.”
The next two weeks passed in a blur of preparation. Brandon wired Mercer’s penthouse with cameras and audio. He looped in a detective he trusted, a man who’d been waiting years for Mercer to slip.
I played my part perfectly.
I told Nicole I was feeling better. I went back to work. I mentioned inspections at the RiNo site. I complained about the scaffolding like a man who had no idea his own death was being rehearsed.
The night Brandon said everything was ready, I felt eerily calm.
I called Nicole.
“I’m going to be late,” I said. “Investor meeting.”
She didn’t hesitate. “Okay. Love you.”
“Love you,” I replied.
Minutes later, the cameras showed her entering Mercer’s penthouse.
I watched from the surveillance van as they kissed like people who’d been waiting decades to stop pretending.
I listened as they talked.
About money.
About timing.
About my death.
“Construction sites are dangerous,” Mercer said. “A fall. Equipment failure.”
Nicole laughed.
“And the insurance?” she asked.
“Paid out,” Mercer said. “Then the malpractice suit.”
“And Mia?” Nicole asked.
There was a pause.
“She’s collateral damage,” Mercer said.
“Not our problem,” Nicole agreed.
Something inside me went still.
When the police moved in, it felt almost anticlimactic.
Mercer tried to lie. Nicole tried to scream her way out.
The recordings ended it.
Watching them in handcuffs didn’t bring me satisfaction. It brought clarity.
The life I thought I had was gone.
But my daughter was alive.
That was all that mattered.
The fallout was brutal.