Part 2: The Sheriff’s Visit
The heavy thud of boots on the porch made my blood freeze. I scrambled, shoving the bundle of letters into the hollowed-out section of an encyclopedia on the bottom shelf just as the front door handle jiggled.
“Elena? You in there?” Sheriff Thorne’s voice was deep, scraping against the wood.
I stood up, wiping the dust from my jeans with trembling hands. “Coming, Sheriff!” I called out, my voice betraying only a fraction of the terror gripping my throat. I smoothed my sweater, took a steadying breath, and opened the door.
Thorne stood there, a towering figure in his uniform, his eyes scanning the study with practiced suspicion. “Late hour for estate planning,” he rumbled.
“I’m just sorting through things,” I said. “My father was a pack rat.”
Thorne walked into the room, his gaze lingering on the floorboard I hadn’t had time to properly secure. “Your father was a man who knew too much about the history of Blackwood Creek. Some people in this town thought he was holding onto things that didn’t belong to him.”
He took a step closer, invading my space. “You find any documents, Elena? Any records that might… complicate things for the Mayor?”
The air in the room grew suffocating. My heart hammered against my ribs. “Nothing,” I lied, my voice steady. “Just old bills and family photos.”
Thorne leaned down, picking up a pen from the desk and rolling it between his fingers. “See that you keep it that way. The Mayor is a generous man, but he doesn’t like loose ends. Your father d*ed because he couldn’t let go of the past. Don’t be like him.”
As he turned to leave, I realized with chilling clarity: Thorne wasn’t here to offer his condolences. He was the Mayor’s personal cleaner. And I was next on his list.
Part 3: The Witness
The moment Thorne’s cruiser crunched down the gravel driveway, I didn’t wait. I grabbed the letters, stuffed them into my coat, and slipped through the cellar door into the biting mountain cold.
The woods were a blur of black pines and swirling snow. I knew the path to the old ridge; it was where Silas, the town hermit, lived. He had been the town’s golden boy athlete twenty years ago, before the “accident” happened, before he retreated into the shadows.
My lungs burned. Every snapping twig sounded like a gunshot. I could see the faint glow of a kerosene lantern ahead, a tiny star in the dark.
“Silas!” I hissed, my breath hitching.
A figure emerged from the cabin, a shotgun leveled at my chest, but when he saw me, he lowered it. “Elena? Your father’s daughter?”
“He’s g*ne, Silas,” I gasped. “And they’re coming for me. You saw it, didn’t you? Twenty years ago. The car. The hiker. It wasn’t an accident.”
Silas trembled, his face a map of regret. “I was there,” he whispered. “The Mayor was driving. They made it look like a collision so they could silence the hiker who knew about their land fraud. They threatened to k*ll my family if I spoke.”
Suddenly, the night air was shattered by the crack of a rifle. A branch exploded inches from my head.
“Get down!” Silas roared.
Gunshots echoed through the valley, tearing through the silence. Someone had tracked me. Thorne. I scrambled behind a fallen oak, clutching the letters. The nightmare had finally caught up.
Part 4: The Archive of Truth
I reached the archives three hours later, battered and frozen, having lost Silas in the dark. I didn’t go home. I went to the one place in town that was still public property—the county records office.
I sprinted to the back terminal, fingers flying across the keyboard. I began scanning every page, uploading the encrypted files to a secure cloud server that would auto-publish to every major news outlet in the state if I didn’t check in within an hour.
“Leaving so soon?”
The Mayor stood in the doorway, his silhouette imposing against the office light. He looked calm, smug, his hands tucked into his pockets. “You’re a bright girl, Elena. Just like your father. But you’re missing one thing.”
“I’ve already sent it,” I said, my voice shaking but triumphant. “The police are on their way. State police. Not Thorne.”
The Mayor’s smile vanished. “You think they’ll get here in time?”
He reached for a heavy brass lamp, but the silence was shattered by the screech of tires and the wail of sirens—not local, but high-pitched, official sirens from the highway. State troopers swarmed the building, red and blue lights washing the office in chaos.
“Drop the weapon!” an officer shouted.
The Mayor turned, seeing the dozen armored officers surrounding him. His shoulders slumped, the facade of the town’s untouchable patriarch dissolving instantly. As they tackled him to the ground, I saw Thorne watching from his cruiser, looking frantic and defeated as his own men began to move away from him.
I walked out into the cool morning air. The sun was rising over Blackwood Creek, casting long, golden shadows over the town that had been built on lies. The letters were uploaded. The truth was out. I stood there, watching the man who had destroyed my life being dragged away in chains, and for the first time in my life, I breathed. The cage was open, and I was finally going home.
END.
