PART 48: “THE RACE TO SAVE THE NAMES”

For one heartbeat…
No one moved.
Officer Collins stared at Thomas.
“You expect us to believe someone set a federal archive on fire twelve minutes ago?”
Thomas met his eyes.
“I don’t expect you to believe me.”
“I expect you to verify it.”
Detective Ortiz was already pulling out her phone.
She opened the emergency incident network.
Her fingers flew across the screen.
Then she stopped.
Her face slowly drained of color.
“There is a fire.”
Silence.
Officer Collins stepped beside her.
“What level?”
“Alarm came in eleven minutes ago.”
“Location…”
She swallowed.
“…Federal Records Annex Four.”
Arthur Rowan closed his eyes.
“The warehouse.”
Richard slammed his fist against the seat.

 

“They’re destroying everything.”

Grace shook her head.

“No.”

“They’re destroying the originals.”

I looked at her.

“The copies?”

Grace nodded.

“Samuel protected copies.”

“Lucan protected copies.”

“But the originals…”

“…prove every forgery beyond dispute.”

Thomas quietly added,

“And originals cannot be dismissed as altered.”

Officer Collins made his decision.

“Ortiz.”

“Call Washington.”

“Tell them to secure every entrance.”

“They won’t make it in time,” Thomas interrupted.

Everyone looked at him.

“The fire isn’t the real attack.”

“What do you mean?”

“They’re counting on firefighters.”

Officer Collins frowned.

“So?”

Thomas spoke with frightening certainty.

“While everyone watches the flames…”

“…someone will walk out carrying the evidence.”

The carriage fell silent.

Arthur slowly nodded.

“Create chaos.”

“Move the prize.”

“It was always Lucan’s rule.”

Thomas looked at Arthur.

“It became their rule after they killed him.”

Officer Collins immediately began issuing orders.

“Ortiz, contact the FBI field office in Washington.”

“Richard, call Gideon Marsh.”

“Arthur, stay with Grace.”

Then he turned to me.

“Merrick…”

“You’re coming with me.”

Grace caught my arm before I could answer.

“There isn’t much time.”

She reached into the pocket of her coat.

From inside, she removed a folded photograph.

Not a copy.

An original.

It showed Lucan standing in front of the Washington warehouse.

His arm rested around a smiling young woman.

Grace.

Behind them stood a brick wall.

A faded sign.

And a blue delivery truck.

Grace pointed to the truck.

“Look carefully.”

At first, I saw nothing unusual.

Then…

Painted beneath the company logo…

Was a small white number.

17

Grace nodded.

“Remember that.”

“What does it mean?”

“Lucan never marked trucks.”

“He marked routes.”

Thomas suddenly stepped closer.

“My God…”

He took the photograph from my hand.

“I never noticed.”

Grace looked at him.

“You weren’t supposed to.”

She pointed to the brick wall behind Lucan.

“The warehouse everyone knows…”

“…is Building Four.”

She moved her finger to the truck.

“But Route Seventeen…”

“…never unloaded there.”

Officer Collins looked up sharply.

“Where did it unload?”

Grace answered with complete certainty.

“In the basement…”

“…of Building Seventeen.”

Detective Ortiz looked confused.

“There is no Building Seventeen on the federal maps.”

Thomas gave a bitter smile.

“Exactly.”

Grace folded the photograph.

“The warehouse burning today…”

“…was never the destination.”

“It was the distraction.”

Silence filled the carriage.

Officer Collins slowly exhaled.

“They’re burning the place everyone knows exists…”

“…while moving the real archive somewhere no one knows to search.”

Grace nodded.

“That’s the final trick Lucan discovered.”

Arthur looked at me.

“Your father wasn’t chasing one building.”

“He was chasing an entire system.”

Just then, Officer Collins’s phone rang.

He answered immediately.

No one spoke while he listened.

After nearly a minute…

He slowly lowered the phone.

His voice had become almost a whisper.

“Washington confirmed something.”

Every eye turned toward him.

“The fire isn’t in Building Four anymore.”

He paused.

“They’ve just reported…”

“…a second fire.”

“Where?” I asked.

Collins looked directly at Grace.

She already knew the answer before he spoke.

“An unregistered government storage facility…”

“…beneath Federal Building Seventeen.”

PART 49: “BUILDING SEVENTEEN”

The train had not yet reached New York.

Washington was still hours away.

But the race had already begun.

Officer Collins looked from his phone to Thomas.

“How many people know Building Seventeen exists?”

Thomas answered without hesitation.

“Officially?”

“No one.”

“In reality?”

“Fewer than twenty.”

Grace quietly corrected him.

“Fewer than nineteen.”

Thomas looked at her.

“You know?”

Grace nodded.

“One of them died last winter.”

Silence settled over the carriage.

Officer Collins immediately contacted the Washington field office through a secure line.

“I need every underground access point beneath Federal Building Seventeen.”

The agent on the other end paused.

“There is no Building Seventeen.”

Officer Collins looked at Thomas.

Thomas slowly held out his hand.

“Put me on.”

After a brief hesitation, Collins switched the phone to speaker.

“This is Thomas Avery.”

A long silence followed.

Then the voice on the other end changed completely.

“…Sir?”

Thomas closed his eyes.

“So someone still remembers.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Listen carefully.”

“The maps you’re using were altered in 2004.”

“The service entrance isn’t beneath Four.”

“It’s beneath the old postal annex.”

“The elevator requires a mechanical override.”

The agent began typing rapidly.

“I’ve found it.”

“My God…”

Officer Collins stepped closer.

“What?”

The voice answered.

“There’s an entire sub-basement that isn’t on any public blueprint.”

Grace whispered,

“Lucan was right.”

Thomas continued issuing instructions.

“Seal every exit.”

“No one leaves carrying paper.”

“No one leaves carrying digital media.”

“No one leaves carrying archival boxes.”

The agent suddenly interrupted.

“Sir…”

“We’re too late.”

Everyone froze.

“What happened?” Collins demanded.

“We have security footage.”

“A delivery truck exited the tunnel…”

“…nine minutes before the fire started.”

Arthur slammed his fist against the armrest.

“They moved the files.”

Thomas shook his head.

“No.”

“They moved something else.”

He looked directly at me.

“Merrick.”

“What?”

“They wanted us to chase documents.”

“But Project Cedar always valued one thing more.”

“What?”

Thomas’s voice became almost a whisper.

“Names can be copied.”

“Records can be duplicated.”

“But witnesses…”

“…cannot.”

The realization struck every person in the carriage at once.

Grace.

Samuel.

Helen Brooks.

Arthur.

Richard.

Every surviving witness was now in danger.

Grace looked out the rain-covered window.

“They’ve changed their objective.”

Officer Collins nodded grimly.

“They’re no longer trying to erase history.”

“They’re trying to erase the people who remember it.”

At that exact moment, Detective Ortiz’s tablet chimed.

She stared at the incoming security feed from Washington.

The underground loading dock cameras had just come back online.

A single image filled the screen.

The delivery truck had been abandoned.

Its rear doors stood wide open.

Inside…

Every archive box was still there.

Untouched.

Officer Collins frowned.

“If they didn’t steal the records…”

“…what did they take?”

The camera operator zoomed in on the empty floor of the truck.

Lying by itself was one small object.

A gray archive box.

The exact same size as the one Samuel had protected for twenty-three years.

Except this one had been emptied.

Across the inside of the lid, written in Lucan’s familiar handwriting, were seven words.

If this box is empty… they’re following Merrick.

Every person in the carriage slowly turned toward me.

Then Thomas spoke the words none of us wanted to hear.

“They were never running from us.”

He paused.

“They were leading us.”

“And now…”

“…the final trap has already been set.”

PART 50: “THE TRAP WAS NEVER FOR THE FILES”

No one spoke.

The train continued north through the rain.

The image on Detective Ortiz’s tablet remained frozen.

The empty archive box.

Lucan’s handwriting.

If this box is empty… they’re following Merrick.

Officer Collins was the first to break the silence.

“Lucan knew.”

Thomas Avery nodded.

“He figured it out during his final forty-eight hours.”

“He realized the documents were only bait.”

I looked at him.

“Then why hide them?”

“Because whoever followed him believed the documents mattered most.”

Thomas leaned forward.

“But Lucan discovered something far more dangerous.”

Grace quietly closed her eyes.

“They weren’t trying to erase the past.”

“They were trying to control the future.”

Arthur Rowan frowned.

“What future?”

Thomas looked directly at me.

“Yours.”

Silence settled over the carriage.

I almost laughed.

“Mine?”

“I was a baby.”

“You were an heir.”

Thomas corrected gently.

“Not only to the Voss family.”

He reached into his briefcase.

From a hidden compartment, he removed one final folder.

Unlike every document we had found…

This one carried no government seal.

No Project Cedar symbol.

Only my father’s handwriting.

Across the front were six simple words.

Read only after Merrick lives.

Grace smiled sadly.

“Lucan always believed you’d survive.”

I opened the folder.

Inside was a family tree.

At first, it looked ordinary.

Odette.

Lucan.

Me.

Then I noticed another branch.

One I had never seen before.

Judge Eleanor Whitmore.

Her name connected not only to Odette…

But to another family entirely.

The Rowan family.

Arthur stepped closer.

“My family?”

Thomas nodded.

“The Vosses and the Rowans founded the original student trust together.”

Richard frowned.

“What student trust?”

Thomas pointed to a handwritten paragraph beneath the tree.

Forty-three years earlier…

Odette Voss and Arthur Rowan’s parents had created a private educational trust for orphaned and abandoned children across Pennsylvania.

The fund had quietly grown for decades.

Businesses donated to it.

Families left bequests.

Property was placed into it.

By the time Lucan became trustee…

It was worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

I stared at Thomas.

“Why have I never heard of it?”

“Because Project Cedar discovered it.”

Grace answered softly.

“They realized whoever controlled abandoned children’s identities…”

“…could eventually control the trust.”

Officer Collins slowly understood.

“So Cedar wasn’t stealing money from children.”

Thomas nodded.

“They were stealing the children…”

“…to steal the trust.”

Arthur looked down at the family tree.

“My father…”

“He died trying to stop it.”

“So did Lucan.”

Grace added quietly.

“So did several others.”

I turned another page.

There, clipped beneath the trust documents…

Was a notarized letter from Lucan.

It wasn’t addressed to me.

It was addressed to the future trustees.

It read:

No child should ever have to earn the right to belong.

If my son survives, do not make him your leader because he is my son.

Make him your leader only if he becomes the kind of man who would clean an old woman’s house for seven months without expecting to be repaid.

My hands began to shake.

Grace reached over and gently squeezed my shoulder.

“He never measured you by blood.”

“He measured you by kindness.”

Arthur smiled through tears.

“Just like Odette.”

Officer Collins’ phone rang.

He answered immediately.

Everyone watched his expression change.

“What?”

A long pause.

“Are you certain?”

Another pause.

“I understand.”

He ended the call slowly.

The carriage became silent.

“What happened?” I asked.

Collins looked directly at me.

“The FBI reached Building Seventeen.”

“And?”

“They saved every original record.”

Relief swept through the carriage.

“But…”

Collins’ face remained grave.

“The surveillance team reviewing the tunnel cameras found something.”

He turned the phone so all of us could see a still image.

The screen showed the underground corridor outside the archive room.

Samuel Reeves sat in his wheelchair.

Grace’s package had just been delivered.

We all remembered that moment.

Then Collins enlarged the image.

Standing in the shadows behind Samuel…

Watching without anyone noticing…

Was a familiar figure.

A woman.

Blue scarf.

Magazine in her hands.

The same passenger from the train.

She hadn’t been following the maintenance worker.

She hadn’t been following Thomas.

She had been inside the tunnels…

Before any of us arrived.

Across the bottom of the surveillance still, the FBI had added one line.

IDENTITY UNKNOWN.

STATUS: AT LARGE.

Grace stared at the image for several long seconds.

Then, for the first time since I had met her…

I saw genuine fear in her eyes.

She whispered only four words.

“She found us first.”

The train continued north through the rain.

And for the first time…

I understood that exposing Project Cedar had never been the end of the story.

It had only revealed the person who had been watching us all along.

PART 51: “THE WOMAN IN THE BLUE SCARF”

No one spoke.

The surveillance image remained frozen on Officer Collins’ phone.

The woman stood half-hidden in the shadows behind Samuel Reeves.

Blue scarf.

Dark coat.

Magazine tucked beneath one arm.

She wasn’t looking at Samuel.

She wasn’t looking at the archive.

She was looking directly toward the hidden camera.

As if she knew it was there.

Grace slowly reached for the phone.

Her hands trembled.

“I know that posture.”

Arthur Rowan looked at her.

“You recognize her?”

Grace didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, she enlarged the image until it became grainy.

Then she closed her eyes.

“When she was younger…”

“…she always stood with one shoulder lower than the other.”

Richard frowned.

“Who is she?”

Grace whispered a name none of us had heard before.

“Evelyn Cross.”

Thomas Avery’s face turned completely white.

“No…”

Grace nodded.

“Yes.”

Officer Collins looked between them.

“Who is Evelyn Cross?”

Thomas answered quietly.

“The only investigator who disappeared before Lucan.”

Silence filled the carriage.

Arthur stared at him.

“I thought she died.”

“So did everyone else.”

Thomas leaned back slowly.

“She worked inside the federal archive.”

“She discovered records disappearing years before Lucan ever started asking questions.”

“What happened?” I asked.

Thomas looked out the rain-covered window.

“One Friday she simply…”

“…never came back.”

Grace slowly shook her head.

“She did come back.”

Everyone looked at her.

“Only…”

“…she wasn’t the same woman anymore.”

Detective Ortiz immediately opened the FBI database.

“Evelyn Cross.”

The search returned one result.

STATUS: DECEASED.

Date of death…

Twenty-six years earlier.

Officer Collins frowned.

“Dead.”

Grace pointed at the surveillance image.

“Then who’s that?”

No one answered.

Ortiz dug deeper into the records.

Then she stopped.

“There are two death certificates.”

Thomas looked sharply at her.

“Two?”

“They’re identical.”

“Same date.”

“Same signature.”

“Different body identification numbers.”

Arthur whispered,

“Someone declared her dead twice.”

Grace closed her eyes.

“They erased her.”

“They gave her a new life.”

“They made sure no one would ever search for her again.”

The train rolled into New York’s Penn Station.

Passengers began gathering their luggage.

None of us moved.

Officer Collins’s phone rang again.

He answered immediately.

After listening for several seconds, he covered the receiver and looked at me.

“The FBI identified the magazine the woman was carrying.”

“What about it?”

“It wasn’t a magazine.”

He lowered his hand.

“It was a custom document case disguised as one.”

Thomas slowly nodded.

“I’ve seen those before.”

“They’re used to transport single files without attracting attention.”

Officer Collins swallowed.

“The case was empty.”

Grace corrected him.

“No.”

“It wasn’t empty.”

“It was waiting.”

My heartbeat quickened.

“Waiting for what?”

Grace looked directly into my eyes.

“For the last file.”

“What last file?”

She gently placed her hand over the folder my father had prepared for me.

“The one you’re carrying.”

Silence.

Every clue.

Every letter.

Every recording.

Every Thursday.

Every sacrifice.

Had led to the same destination.

Not the warehouse.

Not the trust.

Not even Project Cedar.

It had led…

To the folder resting in my backpack.

Thomas slowly stood.

His expression had become grim.

“Merrick.”

I looked at him.

“Whatever happens next…”

“…do not let anyone separate you from that folder.”

Before I could answer, the train doors opened.

Passengers streamed onto the platform.

Among the crowd…

Walking calmly away without looking back…

A woman wearing a blue scarf disappeared into the sea of people.

Grace took one sharp breath.

Then whispered,

“She’s here.”

PART 52: “I FOLLOWED THE WOMAN IN THE BLUE SCARF”

“There.”

Grace’s voice was barely a whisper.

The woman in the blue scarf moved through the crowd without once looking over her shoulder.

She wasn’t hurrying.

She wasn’t hiding.

She walked with the quiet confidence of someone who already knew exactly who was following her.

Officer Collins reached for his radio.

“I’ve got visual—”

Grace caught his wrist.

“No.”

He frowned.

“Why?”

“Because that’s exactly what she expects.”

Thomas Avery nodded.

“She’s testing us.”

“If the station suddenly fills with agents, she’ll disappear.”

Detective Ortiz studied the security monitors mounted above the platform.

“She hasn’t taken the main exit.”

“She’s heading deeper into the terminal.”

Arthur Rowan looked at me.

“Merrick.”

“She’s here for you.”

“I know.”

“No.”

Arthur’s expression became serious.

“I mean she’s waiting for you.”

I looked toward the crowd again.

The blue scarf appeared for only a second between two travelers.

Then vanished behind a bookstore.

Grace quietly spoke.

“Go.”

Officer Collins immediately objected.

“Absolutely not.”

Grace shook her head.

“She’ll never speak to a police officer.”

“She’ll only speak to Lucan’s son.”

Thomas added quietly,

“We’ll stay close.”

“But she must believe you’re alone.”

I took one slow breath.

Then stepped into the crowd.

The station swallowed me almost immediately.

Rolling suitcases.

Children laughing.

Announcements echoing overhead.

Coffee carts.

Newspapers.

Thousands of strangers.

Then…

I saw the blue scarf again.

She stood beside Track 12, studying the departure board.

I walked toward her.

She didn’t turn around.

“You’ve become taller than your father.”

Her voice was calm.

Older.

Gentle.

I stopped a few feet away.

“Are you Evelyn Cross?”

A faint smile crossed her face.

“That’s one of my names.”

She finally turned.

She looked to be in her early seventies.

Silver hair tucked neatly beneath a navy hat.

Kind eyes.

Tired eyes.

Nothing about her suggested danger.

Yet she had remained invisible for more than two decades.

“You’ve been following me.”

“No.”

“I’ve been making sure no one reached you first.”

I stared at her.

“Why didn’t you come forward?”

“Because every person who stood beside your father died.”

The words landed heavily between us.

“I refused to become another reason you disappeared.”

Behind me, I knew Officer Collins and the others were somewhere in the crowd.

Watching.

Waiting.

Evelyn glanced briefly over my shoulder.

“They’re doing a better job hiding than Lucan ever did.”

“You knew he was being watched.”

“I warned him.”

“Did he listen?”

She smiled sadly.

“For about three days.”

Then he started trusting people again.

“That was who he was.”

She reached into her coat pocket.

I tensed.

She noticed.

“Good.”

“Never stop doing that.”

Instead of a weapon…

She removed a small brass key attached to a faded blue ribbon.

The ribbon matched the one Mrs. Voss had always used.

I looked at the key.

“What does it open?”

“The last lock.”

“I’ve heard that before.”

“This time it’s true.”

She placed it gently in my hand.

“Your father never intended you to inherit money.”

“He intended you to inherit responsibility.”

I looked up.

“What responsibility?”

She answered without hesitation.

“Every file you’ve found tells you who was harmed.”

“This key tells you…”

“…who can still be saved.”

My heartbeat quickened.

“Saved from what?”

Before she could answer…

A loud electronic chime echoed through the station.

Every advertising screen suddenly went black.

One by one…

They all displayed the same image.

My face.

Taken only minutes earlier on the train.

Beneath it appeared a single sentence in white letters.

RETURN THE FOLDER.

THIS IS YOUR ONLY WARNING.

People across the station stopped walking.

Hundreds of strangers looked from the screens…

…to me.

Evelyn closed her eyes.

“They’ve stopped hiding.”

Then she looked directly at me.

“Merrick…”

“The final game has just begun.”

PART 53: “THE CITY WATCHED MY FACE”

The station fell silent.

Conversations stopped.

Rolling suitcases slowed.

Every television screen.

Every digital advertising board.

Every information display that should have shown departure times…

Displayed my photograph instead.

Beneath it, the message remained.

RETURN THE FOLDER.

THIS IS YOUR ONLY WARNING.

For one terrifying moment, I became the most recognizable person inside Penn Station.

Officer Collins reacted instantly.

“Move!”

His voice came through the tiny earpiece hidden beneath my collar.

“Don’t run.”

“Walk.”

“Platform Nine.”

I resisted every instinct telling me to look around.

Instead, I kept my eyes on Evelyn.

She didn’t appear frightened.

She appeared disappointed.

“They’ve become bolder,” she murmured.

“They’ve learned fear spreads faster than bullets.”

Passengers began whispering.

“Is that him?”

“What’s happening?”

“Was he on the news?”

Several people lifted their phones.

Within seconds, dozens of cameras pointed toward me.

Detective Ortiz’s voice came over the earpiece.

“They’re posting your image online.”

“We’re losing control of the scene.”

Arthur Rowan answered calmly.

“No.”

“We never had control.”

Thomas Avery quietly added,

“They’re trying to separate Merrick from the crowd.”

Officer Collins immediately understood.

“Because crowds panic.”

“And panic creates blind spots.”

Evelyn gently took my elbow.

“Walk with me.”

“Where?”

“Somewhere cameras can’t follow.”

We moved naturally through the station.

Not too quickly.

Not too slowly.

The digital screens continued flashing my face.

Then…

The message changed.

The photograph disappeared.

Only six words remained.

THURSDAY ENDS WHERE IT BEGAN.

I stopped walking.

Thursday.

Mrs. Voss.

The house.

The kitchen.

The soup.

Every important moment had happened on a Thursday.

Evelyn looked at the screen only once.

Then she whispered,

“They’re talking to you.”

“What does it mean?”

“It means…”

She closed her eyes briefly.

“…they know about Odette.”

Arthur’s voice suddenly became urgent in my ear.

“Merrick.”

“I know where they’re sending you.”

“Where?”

“The house.”

Richard came onto the channel.

“The Thursday Room.”

Officer Collins spoke immediately afterward.

“No.”

“It’s too obvious.”

Thomas disagreed.

“It isn’t about the building.”

“It’s about what’s inside it.”

Grace’s calm voice joined them.

“The letters.”

Everyone fell silent.

My father’s birthday letters.

The ones he had written every year.

I felt my stomach tighten.

“They think I have them.”

Evelyn nodded.

“They don’t know whether you do.”

“But they can’t risk finding out.”

As we reached a quiet service corridor, Officer Collins emerged from an unmarked maintenance door.

Two plainclothes agents followed him.

“We’re leaving.”

Evelyn shook her head.

“You’ll never outrun this.”

“We don’t have to outrun it,” Collins replied.

“We only need to stay ahead.”

Before anyone could move again, Detective Ortiz rushed toward us holding a tablet.

“You need to see this.”

She turned the screen around.

Live security footage from Philadelphia.

Mrs. Voss’s house.

The front porch.

The flowers beneath the window.

Everything looked normal.

Until the camera zoomed in.

The front door…

Was standing open.

Officer Collins frowned.

“Who has access?”

I answered quietly.

“No one.”

The camera switched to the living room.

The old radio.

The kitchen table.

The chairs.

Empty.

Then…

Movement.

Someone walked slowly into the kitchen.

The security camera caught only the back of the person’s coat.

Dark blue.

A familiar blue scarf hung loosely around their neck.

Evelyn stared at the screen.

Her voice dropped to almost a whisper.

“That’s not me.”

The figure walked directly to the kitchen table.

They gently placed a white envelope where Mrs. Voss always served soup.

Then they looked directly into the security camera.

Although the face remained hidden beneath the scarf…

The person slowly raised one hand.

And bent their little finger inward.

Exactly…

The way Lucan Voss always had.

PART 54: “THE PERSON SITTING AT MRS. VOSS’S TABLE”

No one in the station spoke.

Every eye remained fixed on Detective Ortiz’s tablet.

The security camera showed the kitchen exactly as I remembered it.

The old curtains.

The yellow radio.

The kitchen table.

Mrs. Voss’s chair.

And the figure wearing the blue scarf.

The person sat down slowly.

Not like a stranger.

Like someone who had sat there many times before.

Officer Collins leaned closer to the screen.

“They know we’re watching.”

Evelyn nodded.

“They’re sending a message.”

The figure reached toward the white envelope resting on the table.

Then…

Without opening it…

They gently placed one hand on the worn tabletop.

Their little finger bent inward.

Exactly like Lucan’s.

Exactly like mine.

Arthur Rowan whispered,

“That’s impossible.”

Grace shook her head.

“No.”

“That’s deliberate.”

Richard looked confused.

“What do you mean?”

Grace pointed toward the screen.

“They’re not showing us a hand.”

“They’re showing us a memory.”

The figure slowly turned toward the security camera.

The blue scarf still covered most of the face.

Only the eyes remained visible.

Calm.

Patient.

Waiting.

Then the person lifted a small object into view.

A dark wool scarf.

My breath caught.

Mrs. Voss’s gift.

The scarf her husband had worn at the printing shop.

The scarf that had hung beside my front door since I moved into the house.

Officer Collins looked sharply at me.

“You left it there?”

I slowly nodded.

“I never packed it.”

The figure folded the scarf carefully.

Placed it over the back of Mrs. Voss’s chair.

Then pointed toward the radio.

Nothing happened.

The old radio remained silent.

The figure smiled faintly beneath the scarf.

Then reached underneath the kitchen table.

Arthur suddenly stood.

“The compartment.”

The figure did not remove anything.

Instead…

They knocked on the underside of the table.

Once.

Pause.

Twice.

Pause.

Once again.

Samuel Reeves’ face changed immediately.

“No…”

“What?” I asked.

Samuel’s voice trembled.

“That’s Lucan’s signal.”

Richard turned toward him.

“What signal?”

“When Lucan finished building the table…”

“He invented a silly knock.”

“Three parts.”

“One.”

“Two.”

“One.”

“He always knocked that pattern before opening the hidden compartment.”

Silence filled the station.

The person on the screen knew the signal.

Officer Collins immediately contacted the officers already guarding the house.

“Do not enter.”

“I repeat…”

“Do not enter.”

The reply came almost instantly.

“Too late.”

Collins’ face hardened.

“What happened?”

“We received a silent alarm from inside the kitchen.”

“We’re already approaching the back entrance.”

Grace closed her eyes.

“They’ve walked into it.”

The officers’ body-camera feed suddenly appeared beside the security video.

Two uniformed officers entered through the rear door.

Weapons drawn.

“Police!”

“Show us your hands!”

The kitchen was empty.

The blue-scarf figure was gone.

The chair rocked gently.

The white envelope still rested on the table.

Nothing else.

One officer stepped toward it.

Samuel shouted at the screen.

“No!”

The officer couldn’t hear him.

He reached for the envelope.

The moment his fingers touched the paper…

The old radio came alive.

Not with music.

Not with static.

With a familiar voice.

Young.

Calm.

Steady.

Lucan’s.

“If you’re hearing this…”

“…then someone ignored my mother’s instructions.”

Every person in Penn Station froze.

The officer looked around the empty kitchen.

Lucan continued.

“This envelope isn’t for the police.”

“It isn’t for my enemies.”

“It isn’t even for Merrick.”

A pause.

Then one sentence that made Grace cover her mouth.

“It’s for the person pretending to be me.”

The camera suddenly shifted.

The security feed flickered.

For one single frame…

The reflection in the kitchen window caught someone standing outside on the porch.

Not wearing a blue scarf.

Not hiding.

Watching the house from the shadows.

The image froze automatically as the system detected motion.

Detective Ortiz enlarged the reflection.

Her breathing stopped.

Officer Collins looked over her shoulder.

Then slowly whispered,

“I know that face…”

“It was taken…”

“…at Lucan’s funeral.”

Click Here to continuous Read​​​​ Full Ending Story👉 PART 55: “THE FACE FROM MY FATHER’S FUNERAL”

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