The first thing I noticed inside unit 247 was the cold.
Not the kind that comes from weather.
The kind that lives in concrete floors, metal walls, and places where people keep the parts of themselves they never want seen.
Jordan stepped around me and hit a switch.
Fluorescent light flooded the room, and the panic in my chest sharpened into something worse.
This was not a child’s secret hideout.
It was evidence.
The back wall had been turned into a timeline.
Medication names.
Dates.
Photos of pill trays.
Bank transfers.
Copies of insurance forms.
Screenshots of text messages.
A map of our neighborhood.
Receipts from pharmacies I did not recognize.
Sticky notes in Jordan’s careful handwriting covered one side of the board.
The other side was written in a neat adult script.
I looked at him.
He looked at the board.
‘Mara helped me make sense of it,’ he said.
Mara Ellis had been one of Jordan’s physical therapists two years earlier, before Kirsten abruptly transferred his care to a private home program and told me the hospital team had become too aggressive.
I remembered liking Mara.
I remembered her asking thoughtful questions.
I also remembered Kirsten saying Mara made Jordan feel pressured and discouraged.
Now I understood why Mara had disappeared.
Jordan crossed to a folding table and pulled a thin laptop toward me.
‘Open the folder called Timeline,’ he said.
‘And don’t let me lose my nerve before I finish telling you everything.’
My fingers shook so badly that I missed the trackpad twice.
When the folder opened, the first file was a photograph of a marriage certificate from Maricopa County, Arizona.
Bride: Kirsten Bell.
Groom: Aaron Bell.
The same smiling man from the photo on the wall.
The second file was a newspaper clipping about Aaron Bell’s presumed death in a boating accident eight years earlier.
The third file was a wire transfer dated four months before Jordan’s lake house accident.
Money from a company tied to Aaron Bell had gone into an account that later became one of Kirsten’s consulting accounts.
I looked up slowly.
‘He’s alive.’
Jordan nodded once.
‘I think he never died.’
My mouth went dry.
He sat on the edge of a plastic chair as if standing all at once had finally caught up with him.
For the first time since the kitchen, he looked twelve again.
‘I started getting movement back when I was eight,’ he said.
‘Tiny stuff at first.
Toes.
Ankles.
I thought if I worked hard enough, I’d surprise you.
I told Mom before I told anybody else.’
He stared at his hands.
‘She didn’t cry.
She didn’t hug me.
She just got very still.’
Something inside my chest caved in.
‘After that she said we had to be careful because false progress could set me up for heartbreak.
She changed my medicine schedule.
She told me some of my hope could be dangerous.
She said if I pushed too hard I could make the injury permanent.’
He gave a brittle little shrug.
‘I believed her at first.
She’s my mother.’
He had started hiding pills three years earlier.
He showed me photographs of the ones he had tucked into the hem of a beanbag chair, the vent behind his dresser, and the hollow space inside an