My chest tightened.
“What does she say?”
“That you were the bravest person she ever betrayed.”
I turned away for a moment.
The hospital window had gone pale with morning. Cars moved through wet streets below. Somewhere a baby cried. Life continued with its usual cruelty.
When I could speak again, I asked, “Oliver, do you know where your mom might be?”
He hesitated.
“She said if she disappeared, she was either running or buried.”
I closed my eyes.
“Buried where?”
“I don’t know. She didn’t mean dirt, I think. She meant hidden.”
Smart boy.
Terrified boy.
Rachel’s boy.
“What is Blackridge House?” I asked.
His face changed.
He glanced toward the door.
“It’s Dad’s family house.”Family
“Do you go there?”
“Sometimes.”
“What happens there?”
He picked at the blanket.
“Meetings. Grandma says it’s where important people fix problems.”
“What kind of problems?”
“People problems.”
I felt cold spread through me.
“Did your mom go there recently?”
He nodded.
“She went last week. She came back crying. Then she packed bags but didn’t leave. She said we had to wait for the file first.”Handbags & Purses
“The file where we buried the blue scarf,” I murmured.
Oliver looked up.
“You know where that is?”
I did.
God help me.
I knew exactly where that was.
Halewick University had a tradition senior year. Students buried small time capsules beneath a row of sycamore trees near the old amphitheater. Not officially. Not legally. Just drunk, sentimental young people leaving nonsense for their future selves.
Rachel and I had buried a tin box.
Inside were photos, cheap jewelry, a mixtape, a fake wedding veil from a costume party, and a blue scarf.
Not the real scarf.
I thought it had been a joke.
That night, after campus security dismissed Rachel’s first statement and before she turned on me completely, she shoved the scarf into my hands and said, “Hide it where we hide everything that matters.”
I thought she meant keep it safe until she was ready.
I buried it in the tin box.
The next morning, she lied.
For twelve years, that scarf had been under a sycamore tree.
Unless Rachel had dug it up.
I stood.
Oliver watched me.
“I need to go somewhere.”
His face tightened.
“But you’ll come back?”
The question cut me open.
“Yes,” I said. “But this time, I’m going to tell three adults where I’m going, leave a written record, and make sure nobody can pretend I vanished.”
His brows pulled together.
“That sounds intense.”
“It is called being a woman with experience.”
He almost smiled.
Progress.
I called Detective Ana Ortiz.
Not because I knew her from another case.
Because every retired prosecutor has at least one detective whose number they never delete.
Ana answered on the third ring.
“Someone better be dead or lying.”
“Possibly both,” I said.
She sighed.
“Nora?”
“I need help.”
By noon, Ana and I were driving toward Halewick University in her old black Jeep.
Ana was sixty-two, built like a locked filing cabinet, and had once testified that I was “the most stubborn civilian she had ever been forced to cooperate with.” She meant it as praise.
I told her everything on the drive.
Rachel.
Elias.
The accusation.
Oliver.
The accident.
The letter.
The blue scarf.
When I finished, Ana was quiet for nearly a mile.
Then she said, “You kept the location to yourself for twelve years?”
“I thought it was meaningless after she lied.”
“Evidence is never meaningless. Only waiting.”
I looked out the window.
Rain clouds gathered again.
“Do you think Rachel is alive?”
Ana’s hands tightened on the wheel.
“I think rich men don’t panic over dead women unless dead women left receipts.”
Halewick had changed.
The old theater building was now a media innovation center. The student union had glass walls. The fountain where Rachel and I once laughed had been replaced by something modern and ugly that looked like expensive plumbing.
But the sycamore trees remained.
We found the third one from the amphitheater steps.
My knees ached as I crouched.
Ana handed me a small garden trowel.
“You always bring that?”
“You always ask questions before digging up felony-adjacent artifacts?”
I started digging.
The soil was damp and heavy.
Six inches.
Ten.
Fourteen.
Then the trowel struck metal.
My breath stopped.
Ana knelt beside me.
Together, we pulled out a rusted tin box.
The painted flowers on the lid were almost gone.
For a second, I saw Rachel at twenty-one, laughing in the dark, whispering, “Future us will be so embarrassed.”
Future us had never arrived.
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