“We go now,” I said.
Chapter Six: The Run Across Open Ground
We left through the back of the house, moving quickly through the rear hallway and out the back door into the yard. The afternoon light was still bright, the sky clear, the kind of beautiful autumn weather that made the whole situation feel even more surreal — ordinary sky, ordinary trees, ordinary sounds of birds and distant traffic, and underneath all of it, a gas line counting down toward something catastrophic.
Eli kept pace beside me without any difficulty. More than that — he moved with the confidence of someone intimately familiar with every path, every fence line, every shadow of that property. He had clearly spent years memorizing it, maybe for exactly this kind of moment.
We moved across the rear lawn toward the tree line, following the edge of the property toward the service road that ran along the back boundary. Eli had the remote in his hand.
“My mother did not die because of her medication,” he said suddenly, his voice controlled and even, like someone reporting a fact they had long since come to terms with.
I glanced at him as we moved.
“She was screaming,” he said. “Before it got quiet. I was very young, but I remember it.”
There was nothing I could say to that. Nothing that would have been sufficient.
We reached the service gate. Eli held up the remote and pressed the button, and there was a soft mechanical sound as the lock disengaged and the gate swung slowly inward. We stepped through onto the narrow road on the other side.
I turned back once.
Behind us, the house sat at the far end of the property, quiet and still in the afternoon light, nothing visible from outside to suggest what was building beneath it. And then, just as we turned away to run, the sound came — not the sharp explosion I had anticipated, but something deeper and more hollow, a pressurized groan moving through the structure from the inside out, as if the house itself were pulling one long final breath inward before releasing it.
Then the windows blew.
The force reached us even at that distance — a wave of hot air and pressure that knocked us both forward. I pulled Eli down and we stayed low against the ground while pieces of glass and roof material and burning debris scattered across the yard behind us. When I raised my head and looked back, the rear of the house was already fully engulfed, orange fire rising fast and thick against the pale afternoon sky, black smoke beginning its long climb above the treeline in a column visible for miles.
We ran the rest of the distance to the nearest neighboring property — a farmhouse half a mile down the road — without stopping once.
By the time we arrived and the neighbor opened her door and took one look at our faces and immediately reached for her phone, every false story and carefully maintained lie that Daniel Whitmore had constructed and tended over years was burning in that same fire he had intended to use to destroy any evidence of who he actually was.
Chapter Seven: The Face of a Man Whose Plan Had Collapsed
I was convinced, standing in that neighbor’s kitchen while emergency services were dispatched and the smoke from Daniel’s burning house rose visibly above the tree line in the distance, that the hardest part was finished. We were out. We were safe. The evidence was in my bag. The truth had a shape now, solid and documented and impossible to simply dismiss.
Twenty-three minutes later, Daniel called emergency services from Hartford.
He reported his wife and son as missing persons.
He arrived back at the property approximately forty minutes after that, driving carefully, parking with deliberate composure, climbing out of his SUV and moving toward the scene with the prepared expression of a man whose household had suffered some terrible, inexplicable disaster. He had constructed a whole version of himself for this moment — the shocked husband, the desperate father, the innocent bystander returning to find his entire life reduced to smoke and ash.
The first thing he saw when he approached the gathered responders was me. Standing beside a state trooper, my bag over my shoulder, completely unharmed.
The second thing he saw was Eli.
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