
Seeking Justice for My Sister's Murder
Chapter 3
The coffee shop on Maple Street had become my sanctuary—neutral territory where Elliott's influence couldn't reach. I sat in the corner booth, my hands wrapped around a cooling cup of tea, watching Marcus Chen review the case files spread across the scarred wooden table.
"The surveillance footage is damning," he said, adjusting his wire-rimmed glasses. "But we need more. Character witnesses, evidence of motive, anything that establishes a pattern of behavior."
Marcus was younger than I'd expected—maybe early thirties, with earnest brown eyes and the kind of determination that reminded me why I'd fallen in love with the law through Elliott, back when he still believed in justice. His small legal aid office couldn't compete with the marble and mahogany of the firms that had rejected me, but his conviction was real.
"There's something else," I said, pulling out my phone. "Elliott's been documenting his own obstruction." I showed him the email chain—messages between Elliott and various law firms, subtle threats disguised as professional courtesy calls.
"This is evidence of witness tampering and obstruction of justice," Marcus said, his voice tight with anger. "He's not just protecting his mistress—he's actively perverting the legal system."
"Can we use it?"
"Absolutely." He made notes on his legal pad, his pen scratching urgently. "Your husband may have powerful friends, but he's also created a paper trail of his crimes. Sometimes arrogance is its own downfall."
For the first time in weeks, I felt a flicker of hope. Maybe justice wasn't completely beyond reach.
* * *
The call came at seven in the morning, jarring me from the first decent sleep I'd had since finding those scattered bills on my store floor.
"Mrs. Harrison?" The voice was apologetic but firm. "This is David Chen from Sterling Gemstones. I'm calling about your standing order."
I sat up in bed, instantly alert. Sterling had been my primary supplier for three years. "What about it?"
"I'm afraid we'll have to discontinue our business relationship, effective immediately. I'm sorry, but the decision comes from corporate."
My stomach dropped. "David, what's going on? My account is current, my credit is excellent—"
"It's not about money, Mrs. Harrison. I wish I could say more, but my hands are tied."
The line went dead. I stared at my phone, dread pooling in my chest like ice water.
By noon, I'd received four more calls. Venetian Glass Works. Platinum Designs. Even my packaging supplier—all cutting ties with apologetic but final words. Each conversation felt like another door slamming shut, another piece of my independence crumbling away.
Jen found me in my office, staring at my computer screen where order cancellations filled my inbox like digital tombstones.
"Lydia?" She knocked gently on the doorframe. "The Riverside delivery just called. They're canceling too."
I laughed, but it came out hollow and broken. "Of course they are."
"What's happening?"
I turned to face her—sweet, loyal Jen who'd worked for me for two years, who believed in what we'd built together. "My husband is systematically destroying my business. He's calling in favors, making threats, whatever it takes to force me into submission."
Her face paled. "That's... that's illegal, isn't it?"
"Proving it is another matter entirely." I stood, smoothing my skirt with hands that barely trembled anymore. The numbness was almost a relief. "He wants me desperate. Dependent. Broken."
"What are you going to do?"
I looked around my office—at the photos of satisfied customers, the awards from the Small Business Association, the dreams I'd built from nothing. Elliott thought he could take this from me, thought he could strip away everything I'd worked for until I had no choice but to crawl back to him.
He was wrong.
"I'm going to document every single one of these calls," I said, reaching for my phone. "Marcus needs to know how far Elliott's willing to go."
* * *
I was locking up the store when I saw her. Lina Fox stood across the street, leaning against a silver BMW that definitely wasn't in her salary range. She wore a red dress that hugged her curves and diamond earrings that caught the late afternoon light like captured stars.
Our eyes met through the glass of my store window. She smiled—slow, predatory, triumphant—and raised her hand in a mocking little wave.
My keys slipped from my fingers, clattering to the sidewalk. She was here. In front of my store. Flaunting Elliott's gifts while my sister lay cold in the ground.
Lina pushed off from the car and sauntered closer, her heels clicking against the pavement like a countdown. She stopped just outside my door, close enough that I could see the perfect application of her lipstick, the way her eyes glittered with malicious joy.
"Lovely store," she said, her voice carrying through the glass. "Such a shame about your recent... supply issues."
Rage flooded through me, hot and clean and clarifying. I yanked the door open, stepping onto the sidewalk to face her.
"You murdered my sister," I said, my voice steady despite the fury coursing through my veins.
Her smile widened. "Prove it."
She turned and walked back to the BMW, her hips swaying with practiced confidence. The car purred to life, and she drove away, leaving me standing on the sidewalk with my hands clenched into fists and the taste of helpless rage bitter in my mouth.
But as I watched her taillights disappear around the corner, I realized something important: Lina Fox had just made a mistake. She'd shown herself to me in public, connected herself to Elliott's gifts, demonstrated her knowledge of my business troubles.
She thought she was untouchable. But arrogance, as Marcus had said, could be its own downfall.
I pulled out my phone and dialed his number. When he answered, I said, "I have more evidence. And I think it's time we went on the offensive."
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