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The safety deposit box key felt impossibly heavy in my palm as we stood in First National’s
marble lobby. Leo’s presence beside me drew curious glances from the bank’s wealthy clientele – no doubt they’d seen the morning news about the “murderous socialite” and her “mafia lover.”
“Mrs. Lane?” The bank manager approached, his professional smile barely masking his discomfort. “If you’ll follow me?”
The private viewing room was all old wood and subtle wealth. I sat at the antique table while
the manager retrieved box 247, my hands trembling beneath the surface. Leo’s fingers found mine, steady and warm.
“Whatever’s in there,” he murmured, “we face it together.”
The metal box made a soft thud as the manager set it down. “Take all the time you need.” He retreated, closing the heavy door behind him.
“For a long moment, I just stared at it. Inside this box lay either my salvation or my final destruction. Maria had died protecting these records – what secrets could be worth killing for?
“Victoria.” Leo’s voice was gentle. “You don’t have to do this now.”
“Yes, I do.” I inserted the key, the lock clicking open with finality.
The contents were meticulously organized – folders labeled by date, handwritten notes, even USB drives carefully wrapped in tissue paper. But what caught my eye was a thick envelope with my name written in Maria’s familiar script.
“My dearest Victoria,” the letter began. “If you’re reading this, something has happened to me. I always knew this day might come the moment I started documenting Nathaniel’s visits
to your mother, I knew I was playing with fire.”
My breath caught. Leo leaned closer, reading over my shoulder.
“He came to the hospital often during those final months, always when you weren’t there. He’d talk to your mother – about the treatments, about you, about the future. But something wasn’t right. The way he spoke about the experimental therapy, the clinics he recommended… I started recording everything.
The USB drives contain security footage from the hospital corridors, showing when he visited. The blue folder has copies of all prescriptions and treatments he pushed for- many of which I now believe were designed to fail. He wasn’t trying to save your mother, Victoria. He was ensuring she wouldn’t survive to warn you about him.
But most importantly, I have your mother’s final recording. The night before she died, she asked me to film her statement. She knew something was wrong, even then. The red envelope contains that memory card.
Your mother loved you desperately, Victoria. She saw through Nathaniel’s manipulation but was too weak to fight by then. Her last words were about you about protecting you from what
she’d discovered.
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Be careful who you trust with this information. Nathaniel’s influence runs deep, and he’ll do anything to keep these secrets buried.
With love and hope, Maria”
Tears blurred my vision as Leo pulled out the memory card. His hands were gentle as he
inserted it into his phone, holding it where we both could see.
My mother’s face filled the screen, gaunt but determined. The timestamp showed 2:14 AM, just hours before she died.
“Victoria, my darling girl.” Her voice was weak but clear. “If you’re seeing this, then my suspicions about Nathaniel were right. The treatments he suggested… they’re not what they seem. I found documents on his phone when he left it charging by my bed – proof that he’s working with someone at the hospital to…” A coughing fit interrupted her words.
“The clinic in Switzerland? It’s a front. The doctor he recommended? Paid to give false hope. He’s using my illness to control you, to push you into marriage. There’s more so much more –
but I’m so tired…”
She looked directly into the camera, her eyes suddenly fierce. “Don’t trust him, Victoria. And don’t blame yourself for any of this. You did everything you could to save me. The money you
took? I knew about it. I understood. But Nathaniel… he’s turning even that act of love into a
weapon.”
The video ended abruptly. I sat frozen, Leo’s arms around me the only thing keeping me
anchored to reality.
“She knew.” My voice sounded strange to my own ears. “All this time, she knew what he was
doing.”
“And now we have proof.” Leo was already copying the files to his secure server. “This isn’t just about your mother anymore. This is evidence of medical fraud, conspiracy, possibly
murder.”
A knock at the door made us both tense. Sofia slipped in, her expression urgent.
“We need to move. Now.” She glanced at the security cameras. “Nathaniel’s men just
entered the bank. Three minutes, tops, before they reach this floor.”
Leo quickly gathered everything into his briefcase. “The back exit?”
“Covered. But I’ve got a better idea.” Sofia handed me a bank employee’s uniform. “Time to disappear in plain sight.”
As I changed quickly behind a privacy screen, I could hear Leo coordinating with his team through his earpiece. The magnitude of what we’d discovered was still sinking in. Nathaniel hadn’t just killed my mother he’d tortured her slowly, methodically, all while playing the
devoted son–in–law.
“Ready?” Leo’s hand found the small of my back as I emerged in my disguise.
I nodded, straightening my borrowed nametag. The rage inside me had crystallized into
O