PART 2: “They Thought I Would Pay the $4,386 Bill… They Were Wrong”

The knock came again.
Three slow taps.
Not loud.
Not desperate.
Confident.
The kind of knock a person makes when they believe the person inside already belongs to them.
I stood frozen in the center of the room.
My mother’s voice had vanished with the dead call.
The photograph trembled in my hand.
Outside my door, Victor waited.
My entire life I had feared that man.
Not because he shouted.
Not because he hit walls.
Victor was worse than that.
He smiled.
He smiled while destroying people.
He smiled while lying.
He smiled while turning truth into something nobody could recognize anymore.
And now he was standing outside my apartment.
Waiting.
“Mariana,” he called softly.
The sweetness in his voice made my skin crawl.
“We can fix this.”

I looked around my destroyed room.

The overturned mattress.

The empty keepsake box.

My grandmother’s missing papers.

The photograph of Rose.

The message written behind it.

Ask about Account 307.

Fix this?

No.

Someone had already tried to erase it.

Another knock.

“Mariana.”

I backed away from the door.

Slowly.

Silently.

My pulse hammered so loudly I was sure he could hear it.

Then my phone vibrated.

A text message.

Unknown number.

Only three words.

BACK WINDOW. NOW.

I stared at the screen.

Another message appeared.

HE IS NOT ALONE.

Every muscle in my body tightened.

I moved toward the curtains.

Carefully.

Slowly.

I peeked through the edge.

A black SUV sat across the street.

Engine running.

Lights off.

Two men inside.

Watching the building.

Not neighbors.

Not police.

Watching.

Waiting.

My stomach dropped.

Victor had not come to talk.

He had come prepared.

Another text arrived.

LEAVE IMMEDIATELY.

The phone rang before I could think.

Unknown number again.

I answered.

“Hello?”

A woman whispered urgently.

“Don’t speak. Just listen.”

The voice wasn’t Rose.

It wasn’t Detective Maldonado.

It was someone else.

Older.

Terrified.

“I worked at the cemetery.”

I froze.

“The burial vault.”

My grip tightened on the phone.

“Account 307?”

“Yes.”

A shaky breath.

“They lied about what was buried there.”

The hallway outside creaked.

Victor’s footsteps.

Closer.

“Who are you?” I whispered.

“No time.”

The woman sounded like she was crying.

“They moved something before your grandmother’s funeral.”

Something.

Not someone.

Something.

“What?”

The answer came immediately.

“Files.”

My heart skipped.

“Thousands of pages.”

The woman continued.

“Names.”

“Payments.”

“Birth records.”

“Court records.”

“Photographs.”

The blood drained from my face.

It wasn’t money.

It had never been money.

The passbook wasn’t leading to wealth.

It was leading to evidence.

A lifetime of evidence.

Then the woman said something that changed everything.

“Your mother wasn’t the first.”

I stopped breathing.

“What?”

“Rose wasn’t the first woman who disappeared.”

The room seemed to tilt.

The woman lowered her voice.

“There were others.”

My knees nearly buckled.

“What others?”

“Girls.”

The word hit like ice water.

“Young mothers.”

A long pause.

“Women who knew too much.”

The hallway floorboard groaned.

Victor was moving.

Right outside my door.

The woman whispered faster.

“Your grandmother found records.”

“Records of what?”

Another pause.

Then:

“Babies.”

The world went silent.

For a second I heard nothing.

Not Victor.

Not traffic.

Not even my own heartbeat.

Only that word.

Babies.

The woman inhaled sharply.

“They changed identities.”

“They sold records.”

“They erased people.”

I grabbed the edge of the desk to stay standing.

“No.”

“It’s true.”

“My mother—”

“Was trying to stop them.”

A sound exploded outside.

The apartment building’s front door slammed.

Heavy footsteps entered the hallway.

More than one person.

Victor wasn’t alone.

The woman on the phone whispered:

“They found me.”

My blood froze.

“What?”

A car door slammed somewhere on her end.

She started crying.

“Listen carefully, Mariana.”

“I’m listening.”

“The key isn’t in the vault.”

“What key?”

“The red stamp.”

The passbook.

“The red stamp is a code.”

I felt dizzy.

“What code?”

Before she could answer—

A crash.

The sound of glass shattering somewhere in her background.

A scream.

Then silence.

The call disconnected.

My screen went dark.

Outside my apartment door, Victor stopped pretending.

His voice lost its sweetness.

“Mariana.”

A hard fist struck the wood.

BOOM.

I jumped.

Another hit.

BOOM.

“Open the door.”

No smile now.

No kindness.

No fatherly concern.

Just anger.

Pure anger.

Because he knew I had learned something.

My phone buzzed again.

Another unknown number.

This time it was a photograph.

A cemetery map.

One location circled in red.

ACCOUNT 307.

And beneath it, a message.

YOU HAVE 24 HOURS BEFORE THEY EMPTY THE VAULT.

Then a final message arrived.

The last line made my entire body go cold.

Your sister was never buried there………..

 

Click Here to continuous Read​​​​ Full Ending Story👉PART(3): “They Thought I Would Pay the $4,386 Bill… They Were Wrong”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *