I was reading words my wife had written while carrying a fear I never saw. A fear she had hidden from me to keep our sons safe.
The letter told me not to warn Marcus.
It told me every drive and ledger on the desk was insurance.
It told me not to trust anything Marcus said about her state of mind, her judgment, or the cause of her death.
The cause of her death.
A year earlier, Victoria had died in what police called a tragic single-car accident on a rain-slick road outside the city.
She had left the office after a late meeting, called to say she’d be home in twenty minutes, and never made it. The report said she lost control on a curve and hit a barrier hard enough to be killed instantly.
I had believed it because grief will accept any explanation that spares you from imagining something worse.
Thomas, to his credit, had stopped touching anything after opening the letter.
He called me first.
I called our attorney, Emma Hart, a careful and deeply practical woman who had handled our estate paperwork after Victoria’s death.
Emma told me not to move another page and to call the police immediately.