Said he had a client looking for properties in that area.
When we mentioned Sarah had a house there that she never used, he was very interested.”
I felt cold all over. “Mom, how did he know I had a house in Alexandria?”
She shrugged.
“I don’t know. I might have mentioned it to someone.
Maybe at church?
Or book club? I was talking about how you’re never home, and—”
“Jesus Christ,” I muttered. Crawford pulled out his phone.
“Williams, get someone on this Rick Delano immediately.
I want to know who he really is and who he’s connected to.” He turned back to my parents. “Did this agent ask any questions about Sarah’s work?
About why she traveled so much?”
My father nodded slowly. “He seemed curious.
Asked if you were military or something.
We told him you worked for the Marshals, that you traveled for security assignments. He seemed impressed.”
The pieces were falling into place, and the picture they made was terrifying. Someone had targeted my parents.
Probably identified them through social media or public records.
Found out they had access to my property. Planted a fake real estate agent to convince them to sell.
Purchased the house through a shell company at below market value. All to find Angela Moretti.
“Mr.
and Mrs. Mitchell,” Williams said formally, “I need you to understand that you may have endangered a federal witness and her children. The people who bought that house are very likely connected to a criminal organization.
They needed to know where our witness was located, and you gave them that information.”
My mother sank into a nearby lawn chair, her face ashen.
“We didn’t know. I swear we didn’t know.”
“That doesn’t matter,” Crawford said.
“What matters is that actions have consequences. You used an invalid power of attorney to sell property that wasn’t yours to sell.
Federal property.
That’s a crime.”
Rachel stepped forward, her voice shrill. “You’re going to arrest them? For helping me have a wedding?
Sarah, tell them this is crazy!”
I looked at my sister—twenty-nine years old, never held a real job, constantly demanding money from our parents for one thing or another, always the center of attention, always getting whatever she wanted.
“Rachel, they sold my house to fund your wedding. A house I bought with money I earned.
A house the government was using to protect a mother and two small children from murderers. No, I’m not going to tell them it’s crazy.”
My father rallied slightly.
“Now wait just a minute.
We had that power of attorney. Legally—”
“Legally,” Williams interrupted, “that power of attorney expired when your daughter returned from military deployment and failed to be renewed. Legally, you committed fraud by representing to the title company that you had authority to sell.
Legally, you’re facing potential federal charges for interference with a federal operation, theft of government property, and fraud.”
The reunion had gone completely silent.
Thirty relatives stood in a rough circle, watching this unfold like it was a television show. My grandmother pushed through the crowd.
“Sarah Mitchell, what is happening here?”
I turned to face her—the woman who’d raised me while my parents were “too busy” with Rachel, who’d taught me to be strong and independent, who’d been the only one to attend my military graduation because my parents were at Rachel’s college orientation. “Grandma, I bought a house.
The government was using it to protect people.
Mom and Dad sold it without asking me and gave the money to Rachel. Now the people I was protecting might be in danger.”
Her face hardened. She turned to my mother with an expression I’d never seen before.
“Eleanor, what have you done?”
My mother burst into tears.
“I didn’t know! How was I supposed to know?”
“By asking!” my grandmother snapped.
“By not assuming your daughter’s property was yours to do with as you pleased!”
Crawford’s phone rang. He stepped away, spoke quietly for a moment, then returned with an even grimmer expression.
“We have confirmation,” he said.
“Rick Delano is not a licensed real estate agent in Virginia. The credentials he showed were forged. The real Rick Delano is retired in Florida and had his identity stolen three months ago.
And we just got preliminary results on Riverside Holdings—the funding traces back to a network of shell companies connected to the Castellano family operations.”
My mother made a sound like a wounded animal.
“So to be clear,” Crawford continued, “you sold a federal safe house to the very people we were protecting a witness from. You gave them the exact location of a woman and two children who were under our protection.”
“Are they okay?” I asked, my voice cracking slightly.
“The Morettis?”
“Safe,” he confirmed. “We relocated them before anyone could reach them.
But Mrs.
Mitchell, Mr. Mitchell, we’re going to need you to come with us. You’ll need to make formal statements, and depending on what our investigation uncovers, there may be criminal charges.”
The party was over.
Relatives were gathering their children and leaving quietly.
My uncle stood by his grill looking shell-shocked. My grandmother was crying.
Rachel grabbed my arm. “Sarah, you have to stop this.
Tell them it was a mistake.
Don’t let them arrest Mom and Dad over your stupid house!”
I pulled my arm away. “It wasn’t my stupid house, Rachel. It was a safe house.
There were children inside.
Children who would have been killed if we hadn’t moved them in time. All because you wanted a bigger wedding.”
“I deserve a nice wedding!”
“And those kids deserve to live!”
My father tried one more time.
“Sarah, we’re family. Surely we can work this out.
We’ll pay you back—”
“With what?” I asked.
“You already spent the money. And even if you could pay it back, you can’t undo the security breach. You can’t undo potentially exposing a witness.
Dad, people could have died.”
He had no answer for that.
Crawford gestured to the tactical team. “Mr.
and Mrs. Mitchell, you need to come with us for questioning.
You’re not under arrest at this time, but you are required to cooperate with a federal investigation.”
My mother looked at me with tears streaming down her face.
“Sarah, please. We didn’t mean to cause problems. We just wanted to help your sister.”
For a moment, I almost felt sorry for her.
Almost.
Then I thought about Angela Moretti’s face when we’d rushed into the house. The fear in her eyes.
Her children crying. “You should have asked,” I said quietly.
“You should have treated my property like it was mine, not yours.
You should have considered that there might be reasons I couldn’t explain everything about my work. You should have done a lot of things differently.”
They rode back to D.C. in one of the tactical vehicles.
I rode with Crawford and Williams, all of us silent for most of the two-hour drive.
Finally, Crawford spoke. “Your family always like this?”
“Pretty much,” I said.
“Rachel’s the golden child. I’m the responsible one who’s supposed to sacrifice for everyone else.
This is just… the most extreme version of that pattern.”
“Well,” Williams said from the back seat, “that pattern just became a federal case.”
The investigation took three months.
During that time, I learned more than I ever wanted to know about what had happened. Rick “Delano” was actually a career criminal named Richard DeAngelo who specialized in real estate fraud and identity theft. He’d been hired by a Castellano family associate to find Angela Moretti.
They’d identified me through social media posts my mother had made—posts talking about her daughter “the U.S.
Marshal who travels all the time” and mentioning the “empty house in Alexandria.”
DeAngelo had researched my family, found out about Rachel’s upcoming wedding, discovered that my parents had power of attorney, and approached them with a “too good to be true” offer. They’d been so focused on getting money for Rachel’s wedding that they never questioned why someone would pay cash immediately for a house at such a reduced price.
The $850,000 had been Castellano money—laundered through the shell company, used to buy the house, with the goal of gaining access to find Angela. If we hadn’t moved her when we did, she’d be dead.
Her children would be dead.
The entire case against the Castellano family would have collapsed. My parents were charged with fraud, interference with a federal operation, and several other crimes. They pled guilty as part of a deal that gave them probation instead of prison time, but they had to repay the $850,000 (which they couldn’t do—the money was already spent), and they were required to testify against DeAngelo and the Castellano associates who’d orchestrated the scheme.
Rachel’s wedding was cancelled.
Brad broke up with her when he realized there was no more money coming. She moved back in with our parents, who had to sell their own house to pay legal fees and restitution.

