Poor girl. Always so dramatic.
She had been living off stolen walls.
Grandma had not lost the house.
They had taken it.
A heat rose through me so clean and fierce it did not feel like rage. It felt like clarity.
“What can we do?”
Mr. Bell’s tired eyes sharpened.
“With this? A great deal.”
The third envelope was marked:
FOR THE POLICE
Detective Rowan put on gloves before opening it.
Inside were copies of checks, notarized statements, photographs, and a flash drive. There was also an old microcassette in a plastic sleeve.
At the sight of it, Mr. Bell closed his eyes.
“What is that?” I asked.
Detective Rowan read the label.
Victor — August 14 — Kitchen
Mr. Bell exhaled.
“Margaret recorded him?”
“She recorded everything after he tried to close Elise’s account,” the detective said.
Mrs. Patel nodded. “She used to joke that if men wanted women to be quiet, they should not teach us how machines worked.”
That sounded exactly like Grandma.
Detective Rowan placed the cassette aside. “We’ll process this properly.”
“No,” I said.
Everyone looked at me.
“I want to hear it.”
Mr. Bell’s expression softened. “Elise—”
“I want to know.”
Detective Rowan studied me for a long moment.
Then she asked Mrs. Patel, “Do you have equipment that can play this?”
Mrs. Patel gave a grim little smile.
“This bank has been open since 1911. We have equipment for everything.”
Ten minutes later, an old recorder sat on the table.
Detective Rowan pressed play.
Static filled the room.
Then Grandma’s voice.
Younger than I remembered. Stronger.
“Get out of my kitchen, Victor.”
My father laughed. “It was never your kitchen after Lydia signed it over.”
“She signed it for Elise.”
“She was my wife.”
“She was leaving you.”
Silence.
I stopped breathing.
Then my father’s voice returned, lower.
“Careful.”
Grandma said, “I know about the insurance. I know about the account. I know you tried to file Elise dead.”
“You can’t prove anything.”
“I don’t need to prove it to you. I need to protect her.”
“You’re an old woman with a sewing tin and a pension.”
“And you’re a thief wearing your dead wife’s ring.”
A chair scraped.
My father’s voice became a hiss. “Lydia should have listened. She always thought you’d save her too.”
Grandma’s voice shook, but did not break. “What does that mean?”
“It means some women learn too late what happens when they try to leave.”
The tape crackled.
I felt every hair on my arms rise.
My mother had died in a car accident when I was four.
That was all anyone ever told me.
Rainy road. Lost control. Instant death.
Grandma asked, “Did you hurt my daughter-in-law?”
My father laughed once.
Not denial.
Not outrage.
A laugh.
“You’ll never prove that either.”
The tape ended.
The room disappeared.
For a few seconds, I was nowhere.
Not in the bank.
Not in my body.
Not twenty-six years old.
I was four again, standing beside Grandma in a black dress, asking why Mommy was sleeping in a box.
My father’s voice echoed.
Some women learn too late what happens when they try to leave.
Detective Rowan spoke first.
“We need to take this into evidence.”
I stared at the recorder.
“Did Grandma think he killed my mother?”
Mr. Bell looked twenty years older.
“She suspected he may have caused the accident. She never had enough proof.”
“Did you know?”
“I knew she suspected. I also knew suspicion without evidence can destroy the person carrying it.”
I wanted to scream at him.
At Grandma.
At the police.
At my mother for leaving.
At my father for breathing.
Instead, I asked, “Is there more?”
Detective Rowan looked into the box.
“Yes.”