For three days, an uneasiness had followed him everywhere — through boardrooms in Chicago, through polite laughter over expensive dinners, even onto the first-class flight home. He had ended his business trip early without a clear explanation, telling the driver simply, “Oakwood Heights,” his briefcase still half-open beside him.

Standing there now, hearing that whisper, he understood.

It wasn’t stress.

It was instinct.

He climbed the remaining steps quickly, heart pounding. The voice led him toward the laundry room at the end of the hall. He pushed the door open — and the life he believed he had rebuilt after tragedy shattered in an instant.

His nine-year-old son, Noah Bennett, stood pressed against the wall, shirt lifted, shoulders trembling. A few inches from his skin, Lauren Bennett — Michael’s wife of barely a year — held a steaming iron in her perfectly manicured hand.

Michael didn’t yell at first.

He looked.