A ghost in my own life
In the weeks that followed, I wandered through life like a ghost. I slept next to Liam, his scent still clinging to the sheets, a cruel reminder of what I had lost. I wore his old sweatshirt, the sleeves too long, the soft, worn fabric enveloping me in a memory both comforting and suffocating. At night, I listened to his voicemail, his voice a ghostly echo in the silence: “Hi, sweetheart.” Those two words became my refuge.
One morning, the sun pierced the curtains with a pale, almost mocking light. I was halfway through another cup of coffee when the phone rang, shattering the silence. It was his boss, Mr. Peterson, on the other end. His voice was low and strained.
“Emily, I shouldn’t tell you this over the phone. Liam left something in his office safe. A file. Your name is on it.”
I sat bolt upright in bed, gripping the phone so tightly my knuckles turned white. “What kind of file?” I asked, my heart pounding.
There was a heavy silence, thick with unspoken words. “I can’t tell you over the phone. You have to see it with your own eyes.”
The journey to his office
The drive to Liam’s office was a whirlwind of gray asphalt and threatening clouds. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly my fingers ached; the outside world was just a blur of unreal colors. I parked and walked into the building. The familiar smell of coffee and paper enveloped me. Mr. Peterson was waiting for me in the lobby, looking serious, a far cry from the jovial man I remembered.
He led me upstairs in silence, the weight of the moment hanging heavy between us. My heart pounded, torn between impatience and apprehension. In Liam’s office, the atmosphere was heavy, as if one were entering a room laden with secrets. His office was exactly as he had left it, a few scattered papers, his favorite mug half empty. But it was the safe that caught my eye.
Mr. Peterson opened it and took out a thick envelope. He handed it to me, and I could read Liam’s handwriting on it: “To be given to Emily.” My hands trembled as I took it; its weight was both familiar and foreign to me.
The content revealed
Back home, I sat at the kitchen table, the heavy envelope in my hands. I took a deep breath, feeling the fabric of reality dissolve for a moment. I opened it slowly, revealing a series of photos—images I didn’t recognize. There were bank statements, each one making my heart race, and then a note, scrawled in Liam’s unmistakable handwriting: “Em, if you’re reading this, it means they finally got me. Please don’t trust your sister.”
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