
Betrayal and the Road to Justice
Chapter 3
I heard her voice before I saw her, a whispered 'Amy?' cutting through the darkness of my prison. My mother's silhouette appeared at the small basement window, her face pressed against the dirty glass.
'Mom?' I croaked, my throat raw from screaming. I dragged myself across the concrete floor, my body still weak from the miscarriage that had taken not just my baby but any chance of having children in the future. 'How did you find me?'
'I've been looking everywhere,' she whispered, tears streaming down her weathered face. 'I knew something was wrong when you stopped calling. The Kennedys said you'd left town, but I didn't believe them.'
She slipped a small package through the narrow opening – water, painkillers, and a protein bar. Small comforts that felt like miracles after weeks of neglect.
'I can't get you out tonight,' she said, her eyes darting nervously over her shoulder. 'There are guards, and those horrible dogs. But I'm gathering evidence, Amy. Everything they've done to you, to us – I'm documenting all of it.'
'Mom, no,' I pressed my palm against the glass separating us. 'It's too dangerous. These people—'
'I've worked for this family for twenty years,' she interrupted, her voice suddenly steel. 'I've cleaned their messes, kept their secrets. I know where they hide things.'
Over the next few visits, always under cover of darkness when the guards rotated shifts, she told me about the evidence she was collecting. Photos of documents showing the Kennedy's illegal business dealings. Recordings of conversations about bribes and threats. A ledger of payments to officials who should have been investigating them.
'We're going to bring them down,' she promised, her eyes alight with purpose. 'Just hold on a little longer, sweetheart.'
But time was running out. I could feel it in the air, in the increased vigilance of the guards, in the way Mitchell's visits had become more erratic, more desperate.
'She knows something's up,' I overheard one of the guards saying outside my door. 'The old lady's been sneaking around the main house after hours.'
Terror gripped my heart. I pounded on the door, screaming warnings into the void, knowing my mother couldn't hear me, couldn't know the danger she was in.
Three days later, I heard the commotion upstairs. Raised voices echoing through the vents – my mother and Rosalie.
'I know what you did to my daughter,' my mother's voice, stronger than I'd ever heard it. 'And I have proof. All of it.'
Rosalie's laugh was cold, calculating. 'And who exactly do you think will believe the word of a housekeeper against the Kennedy family?'
'The police will, when they see what I've collected.'
There was a pause, and then Rosalie's voice dropped to a menacing whisper I could barely make out. 'You stupid woman. You should have stayed in your place.'
What happened next came to me in fragments – the sound of a struggle, my mother's scream, a terrible tumbling sound, and then silence. The most devastating silence I'd ever heard.
Hours later, Mitchell appeared at my door, his face ashen. 'There's been an accident,' he said, not meeting my eyes. 'Your mother... she fell down the stairs.'
The world collapsed around me. 'No,' I whispered, then louder, 'NO!'
'It was an accident,' he repeated mechanically.
'Was it?' I spat, rage giving me strength I didn't know I still possessed. 'Or did Rosalie push her? I heard them fighting!'
Something flickered in Mitchell's eyes – guilt, perhaps, or fear. 'The coroner has already ruled it accidental death. The case is closed.'
'You're lying,' I said, my voice breaking. 'You're all lying.'
He turned to leave, pausing at the door. 'I'm sorry, Amy. Truly. But there's nothing to be done now.'
As the door closed behind him, locking me once again in darkness, something inside me hardened. The Amy who had loved Mitchell, who had believed in second chances, who had hoped for reconciliation – she died along with my mother.
In her place rose someone new. Someone who would wait, and watch, and remember. Someone who would one day make them all pay.
My tears dried on my cheeks as I stared into the darkness, making a silent vow over my mother's memory. This wasn't over. It was only beginning.
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