I grabbed the red folder, pushed the plywood aside, and crawled through the fence. The wire tore my blouse, but I kept moving.
Behind me, someone slammed against the unit door.
I ran through weeds along a drainage path until I reached the service road near the highway.
Then my phone buzzed again.
Two more texts from my mother’s number.
Go to Daniel Brooks. County Recorder’s Office. Trust no one else.
A minute later:
And Emily, if Hale finds you first, burn everything.
PART 3
Daniel Brooks looked like the last person who could change everything.
He sat behind a plain government desk at the County Recorder’s Office, wearing rolled-up sleeves and a coffee-stained tie.
But the moment I walked in, he stood.
“Emily Carter,” he said.
Not a question.
“My mother sent you,” I replied.
“She said you might come.”
He handed me another sealed envelope in my mother’s handwriting.
Inside was a letter dated three weeks before her supposed death.