She said she was going to meet him.
In public.
She believed she could end it.
But even as she spoke, you could see it—
She wasn’t sure.
“If I don’t come back,” she said quietly, “don’t let him take her.”
Her voice broke.
Then she gave directions.
Where she had hidden everything.
The tape ended.
Silence.
I went back to the basement.
This time, I knew exactly where to look.
Behind the panel.
Second board.
It was all there.
Documents. Records. Names.
And one name that appeared again and again:
Daniel.
My father.
There was also a letter.
For me.
She wrote that she had discovered his crimes—fraud, money, lies built on top of lies.
When she confronted him, he threatened to take me away.
So she ran.
She took proof with her.
Started over.
Hoping it would be enough to keep him away.
For three years, it worked.
Then he found her.
“If you’re reading this,” she wrote, “it means I didn’t make it back.”
I sat there for a long time.
Thirty-five years of questions.
And finally—
An answer.
The next morning, I took everything to the police.
The case reopened.
Old records resurfaced.
Names connected.
Two months later, I got the call.
They had found him.
Alive.
And finally—accountable.
For the first time in my life, the story had an ending.
Not a perfect one.
But a real one.
I went to see Lydia.
Told her everything.
She cried.
Said she never knew.
I believed her.
That night, I sat alone and thought about my mother.
About fear.
About sacrifice.
About what it means to protect someone.
She didn’t disappear without a trace.
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