They threw me out of my own house the day we buried my husband, but they made one mistake: they let me leave with his old toolbox.-luna

Brian’s voice came through Linda’s front door like he already owned the night.

‘Open up, Emily.’

Linda was awake before I could move.

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She stood in the hallway in her robe, hair flat on one side, eyes suddenly sharp.

‘You stay right there,’ she whispered.

I had the laptop open on her kitchen table.

The video file sat under the cursor.

Who came into my bedroom at 3:17?

Outside, Brian hit the door again.

This time the chain rattled.

‘We just want Mark’s toolbox,’ he called. ‘Don’t make this ugly.’

Linda’s face hardened.

‘Ugly already found the porch.’

She picked up her phone and dialed 911 without turning on a light.

Her voice changed when the dispatcher answered.

Soft. Old. Scared enough to be believed.

‘There’s a man threatening a widow at my front door.’

Brian heard the word threatening.

The knocking stopped.

For three seconds, the whole house listened.

Then Jenna spoke from outside.

‘Emily, come on. You’re upset. You don’t know what you’re doing.’

That was what they always said when I noticed too much.

I didn’t know what I was doing when Mark signed our tax papers.

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