Total pages in book: 82
Estimated words: 78334 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 392(@200wpm)___ 313(@250wpm)___ 261(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 78334 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 392(@200wpm)___ 313(@250wpm)___ 261(@300wpm)
The room is very quiet around us. Somewhere in the distance a dog barks.
“I’m so sorry,” I tell her, and I mean it in all the ways that don’t fit neatly into a conversation like this.
She purses her lips, composing herself with the practiced efficiency of a woman who has been holding it together in front of two small children for days and has gotten very good at it.
After a moment she gives me a look that isn’t quite suspicion anymore. “You said he reached out to you. That he trusted you.”
“He did,” I say. “He wanted me to help him expose his employer in an arson scheme to devalue land so they could grab it cheap. He was bothered that in one of those fires, a husband and wife who were camping died.”
Something moves across her face at that. A complicated mix of pride and grief and fury. “That sounds like him,” she says softly. “He was so kind and compassionate.” She sits up a little straighter, as if struck by a memory. “And I just remembered… about a month ago he showed up here on a Saturday. Unannounced, which wasn’t like him. He always called ahead. He had his car loaded up with boxes. Said he was decluttering his apartment, trying to get rid of stuff he didn’t need anymore, and asked if he could stick some things in my storage shed out back.”
I keep my expression neutral even as my pulse picks up. “Did he say what was in them?”
“Just old stuff.” She shakes her head faintly. “Books. Clothes. Items he said he didn’t have room for anymore. I didn’t think anything of it at the time. He stayed for dinner, played with the kids for a couple of hours, and then left.”
“Are the boxes still there?” I ask carefully.
“Yes,” she says. “I haven’t touched them. I keep meaning to go through them but I—” She stops. “I just haven’t been able to.”
I lean forward slightly. “Marissa, would you allow me to look through them?”
She studies me for a long moment. I let her take the time she needs, not pushing, not filling the silence with reassurances she hasn’t asked for.
Finally she stands. “Come on,” she says.
I follow her to a storage shed that sits in the back corner of the yard behind a wooden gate, a compact structure with a corrugated metal roof and lopsided door. Inside, the air smells of cedar and dust. Garden tools lean against one wall. Plastic bins of holiday decorations stack along the other.
And along the back wall, six cardboard boxes sit stacked in two columns of three, each one labeled in black marker.
Clothes. Books. Kitchen stuff. Old files. Random. Books 2.
Marissa crosses her arms against the morning chill. “Help yourself,” she says quietly.
I start at the top and work down methodically, the way I’ve learned to work through anything that might contain details I’m not expecting. The first box is exactly what the label says—folded shirts, a couple of sweaters, a pair of boots wrapped in a plastic bag. The second is books, paperbacks and a few hardcovers, nothing tucked between pages, nothing hidden in the spines.
The third box is labeled Old Files.
I open it carefully to find manila folders holding old tax returns, utility bills and the kind of administrative papers that serve no purpose but you’re loath to throw them away just in case. I lift them out in stacks, setting them on top of the second box, working my way down.
And there, near the bottom, beneath a manila folder thick with old receipts, is a black-covered, spiral-bound notebook. I lift it out and open the cover.
The first page is dense with handwriting—cramped, careful script filling the lines from edge to edge with dates running down the left margin in a column. An obvious log of some sort.
I turn the page to scan and then halfway down the right side is a column of names with most crossed through in single deliberate lines. My eyes land on one that has my breath hitching.
Tessa Ward—Emerald City Herald.
Not crossed out. Circled.
My throat tightens as I stare at the list for a moment, taking in the other names above and below mine as I realize it’s other journalists from various outlets. Some are crossed through with a single line, some with two, one with a question mark beside it.
This was Erik’s list of reporters he vetted, deciding who to trust with information that cost him everything.
And he chose me.
I turn more pages slowly. Dates. Names I don’t recognize yet. Dollar amounts. Abbreviations that mean nothing to me right now but might mean everything to Josie. The notebook is dense with information, weeks or months of careful documentation recorded by a man who knew he was building a case and might not survive to see it to its end.