
Grace's Deadly Scheme
Chapter 3
I stood at the edge of Oakhill Cemetery, my childhood home visible in the distance beyond the rolling hills. The familiar path I'd walked countless times to visit my mother's grave now felt foreign under my feet. Each step was heavier than the last as I approached the eastern corner where the cherry tree bloomed over her resting place—where she should have been resting still.
But as I crested the hill, my heart stopped. Where there should have been rows of peaceful headstones, there was only chaos—yellow excavators, piles of dirt, and workers in hard hats moving methodically through the section where my mother had been buried for eight years.
"Excuse me!" I called out, my voice breaking as I rushed forward. "Stop! Please stop!"
A foreman turned, clipboard in hand, his expression shifting from annoyance to practiced sympathy when he saw my distress.
"Ma'am, this area is restricted. We're conducting a planned relocation."
"Relocation?" The word felt hollow in my mouth. "My mother is buried here. Elizabeth Evans. No one contacted me about any relocation."
He flipped through papers on his clipboard, scanning a list of names. "Evans... yes, here it is. Authorized by Morrison Industries for their new tech campus development. All next of kin were supposed to be notified weeks ago."
Morrison Industries. Elliott. The realization hit me like a physical blow, making me stagger backward.
"Where—" I could barely form the words. "Where is she now?"
The foreman's eyes darted away from mine, and in that moment, I knew. "There was an... incident during excavation. Some of the older containers weren't properly sealed, and with the heavy machinery..."
I pushed past him, ignoring his calls to stop. My feet carried me to a pile of debris where workers were sorting through what remained of the graves. And there, among broken concrete and displaced earth, I saw fragments of my mother's headstone—the carved roses I had chosen because they were her favorite, now split and crumbling.
"Her ashes," I whispered, falling to my knees. "Where are my mother's ashes?"
A worker nearby looked up, pity in his eyes. "I'm sorry, ma'am. When the vault broke, they scattered. We couldn't recover them."
Something shattered inside me. I gathered the broken pieces of headstone into my trembling hands, feeling the carved edges cut into my palms. My mother—the woman who had raised me alone, who had taught me strength and dignity—reduced to dust mixed with construction dirt.
Elliott had done this. The man who had held me through nights of grief when she first passed, who had promised to always protect what mattered to me, had ordered her final resting place destroyed for a corporate building.
I don't remember how long I knelt there, clutching those stone fragments to my chest, my tears falling onto the broken roses. My phone rang repeatedly—Elliott's name flashing on the screen—but I couldn't bear to hear his voice.
When I finally returned to the city that evening, my eyes swollen and my heart hardened, I found our social circle already buzzing with new rumors. Sarah, my closest friend, pulled me aside at the gallery opening I'd forced myself to attend.
"Lucy, what's going on?" she whispered urgently. "Grace has been showing everyone photos of bruises on her stomach, claiming you pushed her down the stairs. She's saying you've been sending her threatening messages."
"What?" I stared at her in disbelief. "That's absurd. I never—"
"There are screenshots, Lucy. And medical reports about her pregnancy being at risk." Sarah's eyes were troubled. "People are talking. Richard and Emma won't even say your name anymore. They're afraid of getting involved."
Across the room, I caught sight of familiar faces—friends of twelve years—huddled together, casting glances in my direction before quickly looking away. The whispers followed me like shadows as I moved through the gallery, former colleagues suddenly finding reasons to be elsewhere when I approached.
By the time I returned to the penthouse, I felt hollowed out, a ghost in my own life. Elliott was waiting, his face set in hard lines I barely recognized anymore.
"Where have you been?" he demanded, not bothering to look up from his laptop.
"The cemetery," I said, my voice raw. "My mother's grave. You had it destroyed."
"It was relocated," he corrected coldly. "The development has been planned for months. You're being dramatic again."
"Her ashes were scattered, Elliott. They're gone. Forever." I held out my hand, showing him the fragment of headstone I'd kept. "This is all that's left of her."
He glanced at it dismissively. "I'll have a new memorial made, twice as elaborate. Now can we please focus on the actual crisis? Grace is in bed under doctor's orders because of your little tantrum."
"My tantrum?" Disbelief washed over me. "Elliott, I'm carrying your child. Your mother's grave is destroyed. And all you care about is Grace's lies?"
"Enough!" He slammed his laptop shut. "These hysterical outbursts need to stop. You need to accept reality, Lucy. This is how things are now."
I looked at this stranger wearing Elliott's face, wondering how I could have loved him for so long without seeing who he truly was. In his eyes, I saw nothing of the boy who had once promised me forever—only cold calculation and impatience.
"Reality," I repeated softly, clutching the broken stone in my hand. "Yes, I think I finally see it clearly."
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