PART 3 My father’s face filled the cracked phone screen. He looked nothing like the strong man I remembered. The broad shoulders that had carried lumber across construction sites were gone. His cheeks were hollow, his hands trembled as they rested on the arms of a hospital chair, and an oxygen tube curved beneath his nose. But his eyes… His eyes were still the same. Steady. Honest. “Finnley,” he began, forcing a tired smile. “If you’re watching this, then I didn’t live long enough to fix what happened to you.” I felt my knees weaken.
I sat down on one of the dusty boxes because I suddenly couldn’t stand anymore. “I’m recording this because paper can disappear,” Dad continued. “People can burn letters. They can forge signatures. But videos are harder to explain away.” He reached beside him and held up several folders. “Everything you need is here.” He coughed violently before continuing. “The money wasn’t stolen by you.” “I know exactly who took it.” My heart pounded so hard it hurt. “Carter.” The word echoed through the empty storage unit.
“But he didn’t act alone.” My father’s expression darkened. “Reagan planned everything.” I closed my eyes. Even though I had expected it… Hearing my father say the words himself felt like another prison sentence. “They started slowly,” he said. “Small transfers.” “Fake vendors.” “Ghost employees.” “They used your administrator account because you handled payroll.” He held up printed bank records. “I hired two forensic accountants without telling anyone.” “They confirmed every document had been manipulated.” “They also discovered someone logged into the company servers using your credentials…”
He paused.
“…while you were unconscious.”
I frowned.
Unconscious?
Dad looked straight into the camera.
“I finally remembered something.”
“The night before the police searched your apartment…”
“You came home for dinner.”
“You complained about feeling dizzy after drinking coffee.”
“You passed out on our living room couch.”
A memory flashed across my mind.
The coffee.
Reagan insisting on making it herself.
Carter laughing while watching television.
The room spinning.
Darkness.
When I woke up the next morning, I barely remembered driving home.
Dad continued.
“I thought you had the flu.”
“I didn’t know Carter took your phone while you slept.”
“I didn’t know Reagan copied your security token.”
“They logged into the company system using your identity.”
“They moved the money.”
“And by sunrise…”
“…you had become the perfect suspect.”
I covered my mouth.
The entire case.
Every piece.
Every login.
Every transaction.
They had built it while I was unconscious.
My father reached toward the camera.
“I failed you.”
“No father should ever say those words.”
“I believed them.”
“I let the police arrest you.”
“I even testified that I couldn’t explain the missing money.”
His eyes filled with tears.
“I’ve lived with that guilt every single day.”
Mine overflowed too.
“I’m sorry, son.”
“I’m so, so sorry.”
The video paused for several seconds while he struggled to breathe.
Then he spoke again.
“After your conviction, Carter became greedy.”
“He assumed I’d never investigate.”
“He started stealing even more.”
“I followed the money.”
“I hired private investigators.”
“I recorded conversations.”
“I copied emails.”
“I saved everything.”
He pointed toward the shelves surrounding me.
“It’s all there.”
“The financial records.”
“The hard drives.”
“The hidden accounts.”
“The fake contracts.”
“The insurance policies.”
Then his expression changed.
It wasn’t sadness anymore.
It was fear.
“If you’re watching this…”
“…it means Reagan probably told everyone I’m buried at Pinecrest.”
“That is another lie.”
I froze.
Dad leaned closer to the camera.
“I’m not there.”
“I arranged something different.”
“The only people who know where I really am are Thomas…”
“…my attorney, Evelyn Brooks…”
“…and Dr. Marcus Hale.”
Another cough interrupted him.
“If anyone else claims they arranged my funeral…”
“They’re lying.”
The screen briefly flickered.
When the image returned, Dad looked exhausted.
“I left one more surprise.”
“It isn’t in this storage unit.”
“It’s somewhere Reagan never thought to look.”
He smiled weakly.
“You remember your grandfather’s cabin?”
Of course I did.
The old fishing cabin by Blackwater Lake.
We spent every summer there.
Dad and I built birdhouses.
We repaired boats.
We caught bass before sunrise.
No one had visited it in years.
“The cabin still belongs to you.”
“I transferred the deed before I got sick.”
“The paperwork is hidden.”
“So is something much more valuable.”
He reached toward the camera one final time.
“If anything happens to me sooner than expected…”
“…don’t assume it was natural.”
A cold wave spread through my body.
Dad looked over his shoulder.
Someone had entered the hospital room.
His eyes widened.
“They’re here.”
The video suddenly ended.
Silence.
Complete silence.
I stared at the black screen.
“They’re here.”
Who?
A doctor?
A nurse?
Or…
Someone else?
I quickly searched through the USB drive.
There were dozens of folders.
Security camera footage.
Audio recordings.
Photographs.
Financial spreadsheets.
Then one folder caught my attention.
HOME CAMERAS.
I clicked.
There were recordings from hidden cameras inside our house.
The timestamps were from nearly four years ago.
The night before my arrest.
I opened the first file.
The kitchen appeared on the screen.
It was nearly midnight.
Reagan walked in carrying two coffee mugs.
She looked around carefully before opening a small bottle from her purse.
She poured a clear liquid into one cup.
Then she stirred it.
Seconds later…
She smiled.
My stomach twisted.
Another camera showed the living room.
I watched myself drinking that same cup of coffee.
Thirty minutes later…
I collapsed onto the couch.
Completely unconscious.
Then Carter entered.
He pulled my phone from my jacket pocket.
Reagan handed him a laptop.
He connected my phone with a cable.
For the next hour they worked together.
Printing documents.
Signing papers.
Accessing banking software.
At one point Carter laughed.
“He’s going to prison for this.”
Reagan answered without hesitation.
“By the time he gets out, Camden will be dead.”
“And everything will belong to us.”
I couldn’t breathe.
I rewound the video.
Watched it again.
Every word.
Every smile.
Every betrayal.
There it was.
The proof that had been missing at my trial.
Undeniable.
Devastating.
Then another recording automatically started.
This one was dated six months later.
My father was sitting alone in his office.
He looked broken.
He was reviewing the security footage I had just watched.
Then he buried his face in his hands and whispered only four words.
“I condemned my son.”
The office door suddenly opened.
Reagan walked in.
She didn’t know the hidden camera was recording.
Her voice was cold.
“You should stop digging.”
Dad slowly looked up.
“I know what you did.”
She smiled.
“You know…”
“…or you can prove it?”
Dad didn’t answer.
She leaned over his desk.
“If you go to the police…”
“…you won’t live long enough to testify.”
My blood turned to ice.
She wasn’t bluffing.
The recording ended there.
I stood in the middle of Storage Unit 108, surrounded by enough evidence to destroy Reagan and Carter forever.
Then I heard it.
Outside.
Footsteps.
Slow.
Careful.
Someone stopped directly in front of the metal storage door.
A shadow appeared beneath it.
Then came three slow knocks.
Not loud.
Not desperate.
Just deliberate.
Knock.
Knock.
Knock.
A familiar voice came from outside.
“Finnley…”
It was Carter.
“I know you’re in there.”
“And I’d really like to talk.”