PART 5 — The Truth at Dawn
The first crash came from the back of the house.
Not the front.
A heavy thud echoed through the darkened hallway, followed by the sound of shattered glass.
Someone had broken a kitchen window.
Grace's pulse quickened.
For one terrifying second, no one moved.
Then Robert spoke with the calm voice that had carried him through thirty years as a volunteer firefighter.
"Nobody panic."
He turned to Frank.
"Lock every interior door."
Then to Caleb.
"Take Katherine upstairs."
Katherine immediately shook her head.
"I'm not hiding."
Victor stepped forward.
"They aren't here for her."
Everyone looked at him.
"They're here for the letter."
He nodded toward the folded pages still clutched in Caleb's hand.
"And the key."
Outside, headlights illuminated the rain-soaked driveway.
Richard Ellis remained beside the lead SUV, holding a large black umbrella while the men around him hurried through the storm.
He looked remarkably composed.
As though he had arrived for a business meeting rather than a midnight confrontation.
Grace had seen that expression before.
People who believed they controlled every outcome often wore it.
She refused to let him control this one.
Robert picked up the house phone.
No dial tone.
"They've cut the line."
Frank pulled out his cellphone.
"No signal."
Victor wasn't surprised.
"They use signal jammers."
Grace stared at him.
"You expected this."
Victor gave a weary nod.
"I was hoping I was wrong."
A loud knock echoed through the front door.
Three measured strikes.
Not frantic.
Not violent.
Almost... polite.
Then Richard's voice carried through the wood.
"Grace Holloway."
"I know you're inside."
"I'd appreciate five minutes of your time."
Grace walked toward the door.
Caleb reached for her arm.
"Mom, don't."
She looked at her son.
"If we keep pretending he isn't there, he'll find another way inside."
She unlocked only the solid inner door, leaving the reinforced security glass between them.
Richard smiled when he saw her.
"Mrs. Holloway."
"Mr. Ellis."
"I apologize for the hour."
"I'm sure you do."
His smile widened slightly.
"I believe one of my employees frightened your family."
"Victor no longer works for you."
Richard glanced toward Victor.
"No."
"He made that decision three years ago."
Richard's eyes shifted to Caleb.
"You must be Caleb."
Caleb stepped beside his mother.
"I am."
"I've heard a great deal about you."
"I wish I could say the same."
Richard chuckled softly.
"You've been reading old letters."
Grace felt herself stiffen.
He knew.
Of course he knew.
"The letter belongs to us," Richard said calmly.
"It belongs to Beatrice," Caleb answered.
"No."
Richard's tone remained even.
"It belongs to a dead investigation."
Katherine finally stepped forward.
"Uncle Richard."
He looked at her with surprising warmth.
"Katherine."
"You've grown into a remarkable young woman."
She stared at him.
"I trusted you."
"I know."
"You raised me."
"I did."
"Did you kill Daniel Morgan?"
The question hung in the air.
Richard's expression didn't change.
Not even slightly.
"No."
He answered without hesitation.
"I did not."
Grace studied his face carefully.
He believed his answer.
Or at least...
He had convinced himself it was true.
Victor spoke for the first time since Richard arrived.
"You ordered the cover-up."
Richard sighed.
"I expected more from you."
"You taught me to tell the truth."
"I taught you loyalty."
"You taught me fear."
For the first time, something cold flashed across Richard's face.
Then it disappeared.
"You've always confused the two."
Caleb unfolded the final page of Beatrice's letter again.
"There are names."
Richard nodded.
"There are."
"There are financial records."
"Yes."
"There are contracts."
Richard smiled faintly.
"Some genuine."
"Some forged."
Caleb frowned.
"What do you mean?"
Richard looked directly at him.
"You've built an entire belief around papers you've never examined."
Grace noticed something important.
Richard wasn't demanding the documents anymore.
He was planting doubt.
Trying to make them question the evidence before they had even seen it.
A distant sound interrupted the conversation.
Sirens.
Faint.
Growing louder.
Richard heard them too.
He looked toward the road beyond the gates.
Victor smiled for the first time that night.
"I wasn't the only one who came prepared."
Grace turned toward him.
"What did you do?"
"When I left my office..."
"I mailed copies of Beatrice's letter to three different attorneys."
"And one retired federal investigator."
Richard's calm expression finally cracked.
Only for a second.
But Grace saw it.
So did Caleb.
The sirens grew louder.
Blue and red lights reflected across the wet pavement.
Several sheriff's vehicles turned through the front gates.
Richard's men stepped back immediately.
No one ran.
No one resisted.
The lead deputy climbed out of his cruiser.
"Evening."
His eyes moved from Richard to Victor, then to Grace.
"We received information concerning possible evidence connected to an unsolved death."
Richard answered smoothly.
"I'm certain this is a misunderstanding."
The deputy nodded politely.
"Maybe."
"That's why we'd like everyone to remain exactly where they are."
An hour later, the storm had begun to clear.
The deputies collected statements from everyone inside the house.
Richard and his attorneys left without handcuffs.
There wasn't enough evidence for an arrest.
Not yet.
But the key...
The letter...
And Victor's testimony...
Had officially reopened Daniel Morgan's case.
As the last patrol car disappeared down the driveway, silence settled over the Holloway home once again.
Near sunrise, Grace found Katherine sitting alone on the back porch, wrapped in a blanket.
The rain had stopped.
Mist drifted over the garden where, only hours earlier, family and friends had celebrated a wedding.
Grace sat beside her.
"Cold?"
"A little."
Grace draped another blanket over her shoulders.
After a long silence, Katherine whispered,
"I don't know what happens now."
Grace smiled gently.
"Neither do I."
"But we'll figure it out."
Katherine looked toward the house.
"Do you think Caleb can ever forgive himself?"
Grace followed her gaze.
Inside, Caleb stood in the kitchen, staring at Beatrice's letter while Robert quietly made coffee.
"He'll have to."
Grace said softly.
"And you'll have to decide whether forgiveness is something you want to give."
Katherine didn't answer.
Instead, she watched the first rays of sunlight break through the clouds.
For the first time since the wedding began, the morning didn't feel like an ending.
It felt like the beginning of a much harder journey.
Not one built on secrets...
But on the difficult choice to face the truth together.
As the sun rose over Oakhaven Springs, Grace realized something she would never forget:
A wedding can begin a marriage.
May you like
But only honesty can build a family.
THE END
