The Girl Her Mother Sold Opened One File, And The Mansion Went Silent-Cherry

The handle turned once.

Slow.

Careful.

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Not like someone searching. Like someone who already knew exactly where the door was.

I crouched beside the open drawer with the videotape in one hand and the blue file pressed against my chest. The lamp above me swung on its chain, throwing yellow light across the concrete floor, the steel shelves, the old safe, and the small white envelope now torn open near my shoe.

The handle stopped.

Then came a soft knock.

Three taps.

Polite.

That made it worse.

A man’s voice slipped through the door. ‘Amara Reyes. We know you are in there.’

My fingers tightened around the tape until the plastic edge bit into my palm.

Reyes.

He used the name from the photograph.

Not the name my mother had used when she sold me. Not the name on the transfer paper. Not the name I had answered to for years while she counted cash at the kitchen table and told me food was expensive.

The voice came again, calm enough for a bank lobby.

‘Open the door, and no one else gets hurt.’

Above me, somewhere in the house, something heavy hit the floor.

A chair.

A body.

My breath broke once, then I pressed my lips shut.

Vale’s voice crackled through the hidden speaker again, weaker this time. ‘Do not open that door.’

The man outside laughed under his breath.

‘He always did enjoy making things dramatic.’

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