I placed my phone on the table and stared at it like it was the only thing holding me together. The vibration earlier had not been random because inside Connor’s coat pocket was a small tracking device connected to an app Scott used during his business trips.

That morning, I had taken it without fully understanding why, guided only by a strong feeling that Connor was not acting alone. When I opened the app, I saw the signal start at the cemetery and then move steadily toward the downtown district.

Connor did not stay behind to mourn his father as everyone expected. He left with the will and my keys, heading somewhere with purpose.

I remembered Scott’s office and the safe hidden behind a framed landscape painting. I also remembered something he told me weeks before he died when his voice carried a strange urgency.

“If anything ever feels wrong, trust what I left outside the house,” he said quietly.

At the time, I dismissed his words as unnecessary worry. Now they felt like a warning I should have taken seriously.

The tracker stopped near Capitol Avenue in front of a notary office. I crossed the street carefully and looked through the window without being seen.