Rachel?
My older sister?
The woman who held me after the police came to my door?
The woman who brushed our daughter’s hair before school because I couldn’t stop shaking?
The woman who stood beside Liam’s coffin crying harder than anyone?
It made no sense.
Liam’s boss, Daniel Harper, looked pale.
“He started acting paranoid about three months ago,” he admitted quietly.
“He said somebody inside the company was stealing money.”
I looked back down at the documents.
Bank transfers.
Offshore accounts.
Payments routed through shell corporations.
And one name repeated over and over again:
RACHEL BENNETT.
My stomach twisted violently.
“She’s a teacher,” I whispered.
“She doesn’t know anything about corporate finance.”
Daniel gave me a look that made my blood run cold.
“That’s what Liam thought too.”
Inside the envelope was another smaller folder.
Red.
Marked:
“IF SOMETHING HAPPENS TO ME.”
I opened it carefully.
Inside was a flash drive.
And a second handwritten note.
“They were using Rachel because nobody would suspect her.
At first I think she believed it was tax avoidance or hidden commissions.
But then she found out the truth.By then it was too late.