“He died last year.”

The words didn’t land. They hovered somewhere just out of reach.

Died.

A year ago.

I stared at her, waiting for more—for an explanation, a correction, something that would make it make sense.

She didn’t offer it.

“We live here now,” she said. “You should leave.”

Behind her, the house looked erased. New furniture. New walls. No boots by the door. No jacket hanging where it always had. No trace of him at all.

Like he had never existed.

“I need to see him,” I said. “His room—anything—”

“There’s nothing left.”

She closed the door.

Not violently. Not angrily.

Just… firmly.

The lock clicked.

And that was it.

I stood there for a long time, trying to understand how a year could disappear like that. How a goodbye could be taken from you without warning.

I don’t remember walking away. Just the feeling of moving. Of putting distance between myself and something I couldn’t process.

Eventually, my feet carried me to the only place that made sense.

The cemetery.

The gate creaked open beneath my hand. Pines stood tall and still, like they were guarding something.

I didn’t bring flowers. I didn’t need them.

I just needed proof.

“Looking for someone?”

I turned. An older man stood near a shed, leaning on a rake. His eyes were sharp, measuring.

“My father,” I said. “Thomas Vance.”

He studied me for a moment, then shook his head.

“Don’t look.”

My stomach tightened.

“He’s not here.”

He introduced himself as Harold. Said he knew my father.

Then he reached into his jacket and handed me an envelope, worn at the edges.

“He told me to give you this,” he said. “If you ever came back.”

Inside was a letter, a card… and a key.

UNIT 108 — WESTRIDGE STORAGE.

The letter was dated three months before my release.

He had known.

At the storage unit, I unlocked the door with shaking hands.

Inside was everything.

Documents. Records. Files.

Proof.

And then I found the video.

I pressed play.

My father appeared on the screen—thinner, pale, but steady.

“You didn’t do it, Eli,” he said.

I stopped breathing.

He explained everything. Linda. Her son. The money. The setup. The evidence they planted using my access. The lies that became my sentence.

He had been sick. Watched. Afraid.

So he did the only thing he could.

He documented everything.

For me.

I didn’t go back to the house. I didn’t confront them.

I went to a lawyer.

And this time, the truth had weight.

Accounts froze. Investigations opened. Charges followed.

The case that buried me unraveled piece by piece until there was nothing left of it.

The day my name was cleared, people expected relief. Celebration.

But all I felt was the absence of time.

Three years gone.

And the year I lost with him.

Later, I found his real grave. Quiet. Hidden. Far from anything Linda could control.

I stood there alone.

No cameras. No noise.

Just truth.

I sold the house. Rebuilt the business under a different name. Started something small—something that mattered—for people who had lost what I lost.

Because there are things worse than theft.

Some people don’t just take money.

They take time.

And you don’t get that back.

So I didn’t waste mine chasing revenge.

I built something better instead.

Something real.

Because in the end, they didn’t erase me.

And the truth they buried?

It didn’t stay buried.

It’s still here.

Alive.