felt it before I understood it. A guard stepped closer. “What did you say?” Ethan started crying. “I saw him… that night. It wasn’t Mom.” The room went cold. The warden raised his hand immediately. “Stop the procedure.” There was someone else in the room. My uncle—Victor Hayes. My dad’s younger brother. He had come “to say goodbye.” But now his face had gone pale. He took a step back, already turning toward the door. Ethan pointed at him. “It was him! He told me if I said anything, he’d make my sister disappear too.” My breath caught in my throat. Because suddenly, memories I had buried started clawing their way back. Uncle Victor was the one who found the knife. He was the one who called the police. And after my mom was arrested… He was the one who took over everything. The house. My dad’s business. Our lives. “That’s ridiculous,” Victor said quickly. “He’s confused. He was just a toddler.” But Ethan shook his head violently. Then, with shaking hands, he pulled something from his pocket. A small plastic bag. Inside it—an old brass key. “Dad told me… if Mom was ever in danger, to open the secret drawer in their wardrobe.” The warden took the bag. Victor stopped breathing. Within minutes, everything shifted. The execution was halted. Not canceled—but paused. For the first time in six years, my mother was not counting down her last moments. She was waiting. Waiting for the truth.Officers were sent to our old house immediately. The same house Victor had kept locked and controlled since the trial. The same house I hadn’t stepped into since I moved out at eighteen—because every corner of it felt like a crime scene I couldn’t understand. Now it held something else. Answers. Back at the prison, statements were taken. Ethan spoke between sobs, but his words were clear. That night, he had
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