He leaned against the stall divider, considering. “Robert’s the oldest. Toronto money type. Likes to sound reasonable while he’s rearranging the furniture under your feet. Allan’s a lawyer. Sharp enough to peel paint. David’s the youngest, though he’s still older than your husband was. He mostly follows Robert’s lead, but don’t mistake quiet for harmless.”

“And Joshua?”

“What about him?”

“With them.”

Ellis looked at me for a long moment, measuring what to say.

“From what I gathered,” he said carefully, “your husband never really stopped being the one they thought they could corner. Childhood patterns run deep, especially in families that prefer force to affection.”

That was answer enough.

When I returned to the house, I carried with me a new sense of the place, not just as Joshua’s secret project but as a deliberate inheritance. Not money. Not even land, exactly. A field of choices he had prepared for me before stepping off the map.

I took my breakfast at the long kitchen table with the laptop open in front of me.

The second video began with Joshua seated in what I now recognized as the library, shelves behind him, morning light at his shoulder.