“It’s pathetic,” I said.
“It’s criminal,” Silas corrected. “First-degree forgery.”
“What about the debt?” I asked. “Why is Dad so desperate?”
“That,” Silas sighed, “is the scary part.”
Silas sent over a second file. It was a credit report, but deeper. It included information from private databases that most people don’t have access to.
“Your father has been bleeding money for a decade,” Silas said. “The house in Seattle is mortgaged to the hilt. The cars are leased. The country club membership is past due. But the real problem is a loan he took out six months ago from a bank—no, from a private lending group based in Las Vegas called Silver State Holdings.”
“That is a polite name for loan sharks, Morgan. They lend high-interest cash to gamblers who have tapped out their credit cards.”
“How much?”
“$150,000. With interest, it is now closer to $200,000. And the term sheet says it is due in full on December 31st.”
I looked at the calendar. It was mid-December.
“If he doesn’t pay,” Silas said darkly, “these aren’t the kind of people who send you a collection letter. They send people to break your knees. That’s why he’s panicking. He’s not selling your house to fund a retirement condo. He’s selling it to save his life.”
I stared at the number. $150,000.
He had gambled it away. Probably on sports or poker or stocks he didn’t understand. And now he was willing to burn down my life to cover his tracks.
“He’s terrified,” I whispered.
“He should be,” Silas said, “but that doesn’t give him the right to steal your inheritance.”
“No,” I agreed. “It doesn’t.”
The final piece of the puzzle was the buyer: Apex Coastal Developers.
“I looked into them,” Silas said. “They are legitimate in the sense that they actually build things, but they are monsters. They specialize in buying up distressed coastal properties, rezoning them, and putting up high-density luxury lodges. They don’t care about the environment. They pave over wetlands. They cut down old-growth forests.”
“They want to build a 50-unit lodge.”
I remembered my father saying on the video.
“Fifty units,” Silas confirmed. “They would need to clearcut the entire North Ridge. Your grandfather’s spruce trees—gone in a week. The tide pools—runoff from the parking lot would poison them within a month.”
My stomach churned. It wasn’t just about the money. It was about the destruction of everything I loved. It was about erasing the history of the land.
“The sale price is $850,000,” Silas said. “It’s a cash offer. Fast close. Apex thinks they are getting a steal because the land is worth double that if it’s developable. Your dad is selling cheap because he needs the money fast.”
“But the land isn’t developable,” I said, a small, cold smile forming on my lips. “Is it?”
“Not anymore,” Silas said.
“Did you file it?” I asked.
“I filed it this morning,” Silas said. “The critical habitat designation update. It is officially logged in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife database and the county recorder’s office. The timestamp is 9:02 a.m.”
“So it’s active.”
“It is active. As of this morning, your property is a federally protected sanctuary for the marbled murrelet. Any commercial development is strictly prohibited.”
“Will the title company see it?”
“If they do a deep search, yes,” Silas said. “But Apex is rushing. They are relying on your father’s word and Barry’s stamp. They might miss it. And even if they don’t miss it, we need to make sure they don’t see it until after they wire the money.”
“How do we do that?”
“We pray for incompetence,” Silas said. “And knowing Barry Miller, incompetence is guaranteed.”
The trap was set.
My father was selling a promise he couldn’t keep. Apex was buying a product that didn’t exist. And I was holding the detonator.
Wednesday morning, two days before the closing, I packed my bag. I told Liam I had to go.
“I’m coming with you,” he said, standing in the doorway of my cabin.
“No,” I said. “This is ugly, Liam. I don’t want you to see it.”
“I’ve seen ugly,” he said. “I’m not letting you walk into a lion’s den alone.”
“It’s not a lion’s den,” I said, zipping up my jacket. “It’s a nest of vipers, and I know how to handle them. Please stay here. Watch the station. I’ll be back.”
He hesitated, then nodded.
“Call me every day. If you don’t call, I’m getting on a plane. I promise.”
I drove to Portland. I flew to Seattle. The flight felt like it lasted a year. I sat in the middle seat, staring at the seat back in front of me, rehearsing what I would say, rehearsing how I would look at my mother and not cry.
I landed in Seattle at 10 p.m. It was raining, of course. I rented a gray sedan, something generic, something that wouldn’t stand out. I didn’t want my parents to spot my Subaru.
I drove out to the peninsula in the dark. The familiar roads twisted and turned through the forest. I drove past the turnoff to my house.
I couldn’t go home. Not yet.
I checked into a Motel 6 in the next town over. The room smelled of stale cigarettes and lemon cleaner. I threw my bag on the bed and sat down.
I opened the camera app.
The house was quiet, but I could see evidence of activity. There were muddy footprints on the hardwood floor in the hallway. A coffee cup had been left on the kitchen counter.
They were getting ready.
I lay down on the lumpy mattress, fully clothed. I stared at the ceiling fan spinning slowly above me.
Tomorrow was Thursday—preparation day. Friday was the execution.
Friday morning broke with a heavy gray mist hanging over the peninsula. It was the kind of weather that muffled sound, making the world feel small and intimate.
I checked out of the motel at 8:00 a.m. I drove to an old logging road about a quarter mile from my property. I parked the car deep in the brush and covered it with a tarp, just in case.
I hiked through the woods. I knew these trails better than the back of my hand. I moved silently, stepping on moss to dampen my footsteps.
I reached my vantage point, a cluster of thick ferns on a hill overlooking the driveway and the back of the house.
I settled in to wait.
At 10:00 a.m., the parade began.
My father’s black sedan arrived first. He got out, looking agitated. He was pacing the driveway, talking on his phone.
Then my mother arrived in her SUV, followed by Paige. They started carrying boxes out of their cars and into the house. They weren’t moving things out. They were staging the house, making it look presentable.
At 11:00 a.m., a moving truck arrived.
My heart hammered in my chest.
Movers. Two men in blue coveralls got out. My father pointed to the house. They went inside.
A few minutes later, they came out carrying my grandfather’s leather armchair—the chair he sat in every night to read, the chair that still smelled like his pipe tobacco.
They didn’t put it in the truck.
They walked it over to a dumpster that had been delivered earlier that morning.
They threw it in.
I gasped, my hand flying to my mouth to stifle a scream. Tears pricked my eyes. They were throwing away my history. They were treating my life like garbage to be cleared out for the new owners.
I wanted to run down there. I wanted to scream at them.
But I stopped myself.
Wait, I told myself. Wait for the money. If I stopped them now, they would just apologize and try again later. I needed the crime to be completed.
I watched them empty my living room. My books went into the dumpster. My rugs. The handmade quilt my grandmother sewed.
I memorized every item. I added it to the tally of what they owed me.
At 1:00 p.m., the developer arrived.
A massive silver SUV pulled up. Two men and a woman got out. They looked like sharks in human suits—expensive coats, sharp smiles, dead eyes.
Then a beat-up minivan rattled up the driveway.
Barry Miller, the ghost notary.
They all went inside.
I pulled out my phone and opened the camera app. I switched to the kitchen camera. They were gathering around the oak table.
My table.
“It’s a beautiful piece of land,” the main developer, Mr. Henderson, was saying. “We’re eager to break ground next week.”
“We are happy to pass it on to someone with vision,” my father said, pouring champagne into plastic cups. “My daughter… she just let it go to waste.”
“Well, to new beginnings,” Henderson said.
They sat down. Barry Miller pulled out his stamp. Papers were shuffled.
“Here is

