
Declared Insane, I Came Back to Bury Him
Chapter 3
Julian staggered to his feet. He threw himself across the carpet toward me.
But I was already gone, and the only thing his bloody palm slapped down on was the old photograph. He pinned it to the floorboards.
"Release it, Julian," I said. I had stopped at the elevator. I turned back to watch.
He didn't look up. His eyes locked onto the image trapped beneath his fingers. His own mother, her arm around the girl she'd named her heir instead of him.
"She wrote it on the back," he whispered.
His voice cracked, splitting right down the middle.
"Get your hand off my property." I walked back toward him slowly.
I brought my bare heel down on the top right corner of the photograph, trapping it against the rug.
"Move your foot, Vivian," he ordered. He tugged the edge.
The glossy material strained. A tiny rip formed near the margin.
"I said, drop it." I pressed my heel down harder.
"She chose you." He finally dragged his gaze up to meet mine. "She always chose you. Her own son, and she wrote 'real heir' under a stray she picked up off a scholarship list."
"She chose competence," I said. "She chose someone who wouldn't strip the pension funds to buy a yacht."
"It's a controlling share you're carrying around," he spat, his bloody hand slipping against the glossy surface. "Not a memory. You don't grieve her. You weaponize her."
"I am carrying a fifty-one percent argument for the board," I said. "And it just destroyed you."
"You're insane."
"I'm a product of your environment," I corrected him.
"I will take the company back," he threatened. "I will hire the best lawyers in the world. I will prove the will was forged."
"You don't even have clothes right now, Julian," I pointed out. "Your accounts are frozen. Your wife just handed the company to me. You have absolutely nothing."
"I have this!" He yanked the photograph again.
I shifted my stance, trapping it completely under my arch.
"You planned this from the start," he said. His chest heaved. "You let me think I won. Three years. You let me think I won for three years."
"You paid three thousand dollars tonight for a blonde escort who wouldn't speak," I said, staring down at his crouching form. "I just made sure you got your money's worth — a microphone and a confession."
"She was my mother, Vivian!"
"And now she's a court case."
"You sick woman." He dug his fingernails into the carpet, trying to pry the photo out from under my foot. "That's the only picture of her smiling. The only one."
"It's evidence."
I leaned down. My fingers clamped over the center of the photograph. I ripped it out from under his hand.
The paper sliced a tiny, stinging line across his thumb. He hissed, recoiling.
I straightened up. I tucked the photo carefully into my coat. Not into the trash. Into my breast pocket, over my heart. He saw me do it. His face contorted.
"That's not yours to keep," he whispered.
"She wrote my name on the back, Julian. It was never yours."
A sleek black industrial shredder sat against the wall of the VIP corridor, right next to the concierge phone. A small green standby light pulsed in the dim hallway.
"What are you doing?" Julian scrambled to his feet, eyeing the machine, certain I meant to destroy the photo to taunt him.
"Cleaning up your mess," I said.
I reached into my purse and pulled out a different stack of paper entirely. His private financial ledgers. Copies. The originals were already with the district attorney.
"No—" he started.
I jammed the ledger copies into the metal feed slot.
"Vivian, don't you dare!"
I slammed my palm onto the green button.
The machine roared to life. Steel teeth caught the glossy pages. The mechanical grinding noise echoed down the corridor, drowning out the distant shouts of the reporters still trapped in the suite.
"You think shredding your copies saves you?" I asked over the noise. "The originals are downtown. I just wanted you to feel what it's like to watch something disappear and not be able to stop it."
Julian hit the floor beside the machine. He dropped to his knees and tore the collection basket out, scrabbling through the shredded ribbons as if he could reassemble his entire defense from confetti.
"It's gone, Julian," I said. "All of it."
He ignored me. His fingers dug into the pile.
"You can't erase this," he muttered. "I'll rebuild. I'll prove the will was fake. I'll demand a forensic audit—"
"Good luck finding a judge to grant a man currently under investigation for murder anything at all."
"I didn't kill her!"
"You watched her die."
"She was already gone, Vivian!"
"She was asking for her medication. You sat in the chair and let the clock run."
Julian flinched. The absolute certainty in my voice finally pierced through his denial. He stared at the shredded ledgers spilling across the floor.
"You really are going to destroy everything," he said softly.
"I am going to rebuild," I said. "Something she'd actually recognize."
I stepped over his legs. I didn't look back at him. I had what I needed. The reporters had the photos. Elena had the board signatures. The DA had the ledgers. And Julian was on a hotel floor, clutching paper scraps like a man trying to hold water.
"You won't get away with this," he called out behind me.
"I already have."
The elevator bell dinged at the far end of the hall.
I kept walking.
The heavy fire door of the stairwell suddenly burst open.
Wood slammed against the wall.
"Nobody move!" a deep voice bellowed.
The head of hotel security charged through the gap. A heavy tactical flashlight swung in his grip, cutting a blinding yellow beam through the dim corridor.
Right behind him, four uniformed police officers flooded the hallway.
Their hands rested firmly on their holstered weapons.
"Hands where I can see them!" the lead officer shouted.
The shredder kept whining.
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