
My Husband and Sister Planned to Kill Me
Chapter 5
The grief that had consumed me since hearing those recordings crystallized into something harder, colder—something useful. I sat at Waylon's kitchen table, staring at the maps and documents spread before me, feeling a strange calm settle over my mind. The woman who had once sacrificed everything for others was gone. In her place sat someone new—someone who would take back what was stolen.
"I want to hit them where it hurts," I said, my voice steady as I traced a finger along the map of my mother's woodland property. "We need evidence that can't be disputed."
Waylon nodded, his weathered face solemn in the lamplight. "Your mother's cabin. It's her sanctuary—and her secret vault."
"She keeps everything there," I murmured, remembering how my mother would disappear for days at a time, claiming she needed solitude. "The blackmail material, the financial records..."
"Everything we need to destroy them," Waylon confirmed, his eyes burning with quiet fury. "But the security system is state-of-the-art. Biometric locks, motion sensors, direct link to private security."
I smiled—a cold expression that felt foreign on my face. "You've been planning this for years, haven't you?"
"Your father made me promise to protect you," Waylon admitted, pulling out a small device from his pocket. "This overrides the biometric scanner. We'll have a fifteen-minute window before the backup system alerts them."
We spent hours formulating our plan, poring over blueprints and security protocols. By dawn, we had mapped out every step—from disabling the perimeter cameras to accessing the hidden safe in my mother's study.
---
Three days later, we watched from the treeline as dark clouds gathered over my mother's remote cabin. The storm was perfect timing—the heavy rain would mask our approach and interfere with the external sensors.
"Ready?" Waylon asked, checking his equipment one last time.
I nodded, adjusting the black balaclava over my face. "Let's finish this."
The rain came down in sheets as we approached the cabin's north side. Lightning cracked overhead, illuminating the dense forest surrounding us. The first bolt of thunder provided cover for Waylon as he worked on the service panel, his fingers moving with practiced precision.
"Got it," he whispered as the security light turned from red to green. "Motion sensors are bypassed."
We moved silently through the mud, staying close to the wall where the rain created a curtain of white noise. The main entrance was protected by a biometric scanner—fingerprint and retinal recognition required.
Waylon produced the small device he'd shown me earlier. "Hold this against the sensor while I override the system."
I pressed my palm against the cold metal plate, feeling a strange detachment as if I were watching someone else perform these criminal acts. The scanner flashed blue, then green.
"Welcome home, Mrs. Chapman," the automated system announced.
The door slid open with a soft hiss. We slipped inside, water dripping from our clothes onto the polished hardwood floor.
"Master study is upstairs," Waylon whispered, leading the way with a small tactical flashlight.
The cabin was exactly as I remembered—expensive artwork on the walls, pristine furniture that no one ever sat on, and that peculiar smell of my mother's perfume lingering in the air. It felt surreal to be here under these circumstances.
We found the study locked, but Waylon had prepared for this as well. A small electronic device attached to the door's control panel, running through decryption algorithms.
"Five percent... twenty percent... seventy percent..." he murmured, watching the progress bar.
Another crack of thunder shook the cabin as the lock clicked open.
The study was my mother's sanctuary—a room I'd been forbidden from entering as a child. Now I understood why. The walls were lined with filing cabinets, and a large mahogany desk dominated the center of the room.
"Find the safe," Waylon urged, keeping watch at the doorway.
I knelt beside the desk, running my fingers along the floorboards until I felt the slight depression in the wood. A hidden latch—exactly where Waylon had said it would be.
The safe was larger than I'd expected, with a combination lock and keyhole. I pulled out the small notebook I'd brought—one of my mother's discarded journals where she'd accidentally written down numbers that matched the safe's specifications.
Three turns right, two left, then right again.
The safe swung open with a heavy thud.
Inside were stacks of documents—Swiss bank ledgers, medical files with Dr. Veil's signature, and a thick folder labeled "Richard Chapman—Terminal Care Plan."
My hands trembled as I lifted out the evidence of my father's murder.
"There's a satellite terminal in the car," Waylon said urgently. "We need to scan these and send them to the FBI before they realize we're here."
I nodded, gathering the most damning documents. As we turned to leave, headlights flashed through the rain-soaked windows.
"They're here," Waylon whispered, his face grim in the sudden light.
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