“Perhaps,” the constable said. “But I see no grounds here for immediate forced entry or inspection. This is a civil matter. You’ll need to pursue it through the proper channels.”
Robert’s face flushed with an anger he was too disciplined to fully show.
“This is outrageous,” he said.
“That woman has no right—” Allan began.
“That woman,” I said calmly, “was married to Joshua Mitchell for twenty-four years. And that woman will decide who enters her home.”
The word home surprised me as it left my mouth. But once spoken, it fit.
The brothers retreated not dramatically, not with shouted threats or cinematic fury, but with the sort of clipped, humiliated stiffness that belongs to men who believe they were supposed to win the first round on presentation alone. The constable gave me an apologetic nod before following them down the steps.
I closed the door and leaned against it.
The house went quiet around me. Big, breathing quiet. A silence full of wood grain and memory and whatever love can build when it knows time is short.
On the desk, the laptop waited.
Tomorrow’s video was already there.