The police were swarming my living room, taking notes and dusting for prints. My wife, Elena, had vanished from the grocery store parking lot at 6:00 PM. Her car was found abandoned on a side road, door wide open, her purse spilled on the pavement.
“We’ll find her, Mr. Hayes,” the lead detective said, patting my shoulder. “We have a BOL out on the black SUV seen nearby.”
I nodded, numb with grief. I went out to the driveway to sit in my own car, needing a second to breathe away from the flashing lights. That’s when I saw the notification on my phone. My cloud storage for the dashcam—the one I’d installed in her car as a surprise—had just finished syncing a new file.
The timestamp was from 6:15 PM. Fifteen minutes after she was supposedly taken.
I hit play, expecting to hear the sounds of a struggle or the heavy breathing of a kidnapper. Instead, there was silence, followed by the soft clink of ice against glass.
“Did you put enough in?” a male voice whispered. It was deep, calm, and hauntingly familiar.
“Enough to stop a horse,” Elena’s voice replied. There was no tremor in her tone. No tears. “He thinks I’m at the Kroger on 5th. By the time he realizes I’m gone, the toxins will already be doing their work.”
My heart hammered against my ribs. I looked toward my house. I had just finished half a cup of coffee that Elena had “prepped” for me before she supposedly left for the store.
“He’s been tracking the bank accounts,” the man said. “He was getting too close to finding out about the offshore transfers.”
“It doesn’t matter now,” Elena whispered. I could hear the sound of a kiss—a slow, lingering sound. “In five minutes, he’ll feel a slight pinch in his chest. Then he’ll fall asleep. By the time the police ‘find’ me tomorrow, traumatized and escaped from my captors, the ‘grieving widow’ will inherit everything.”
I looked at the clock on my dashboard. 9:42 PM.
Suddenly, a sharp, burning sensation flared in the center of my chest. My vision blurred, the tail lights of the police cruisers turning into long, red smears. I tried to reach for the door handle, but my arm felt like it weighed a thousand pounds.
I looked up at the second-story window of my house. A figure was standing there, silhouetted against the light. It wasn’t a police officer.
The figure raised a cell phone to their ear. My phone began to ring in my lap.