Chapter 12: The First Letter
Weeks passed. Then months. Spring finally settled over the coastal town of Oakhaven.
The air grew significantly warmer. The wooden boardwalk filled with laughing families and tourists. Bright flowers appeared in the window boxes along Main Street.
Life continued moving forward. And for the first time in a decade, I allowed myself to genuinely enjoy it without feeling an ounce of guilt.
Every few weeks, I would hear from mutual friends in the city. Not because Adrian forced them to call, but because people naturally noticed the massive changes on their own.
They gossiped about how the untouchable Adrian Moretti had started leaving high-stakes meetings early. They talked about how he attended family events personally, instead of just sending a check. They mentioned how he visited the charity programs I loved, quietly listening to the directors instead of barking orders.
At first, I completely dismissed the stories. Change sounded incredibly easy when described by other people.
Real change is measured entirely in consistency. Time would reveal the truth.
Then, one Tuesday afternoon, I checked my small metal mailbox at the end of the driveway. Inside was a single, thick envelope.
It wasn’t an email. It wasn’t a text message. It was a handwritten letter.
I sat on my porch rocking chair and carefully tore the envelope open. Adrian’s handwriting remained as sharp and terrible as it had always been.
I smiled before I even finished reading the first page.
There were no grand, sweeping declarations inside. There were no manipulative promises or desperate requests for me to come back.
He wrote simply about a youth volunteer event he had attended in Brooklyn. He wrote about a historical fiction book he had read that he thought I would enjoy. He wrote about finally realizing how much of his life he had violently rushed through without ever truly experiencing it.
At the very bottom of the page, he added one single, devastating sentence.
“Thank you for teaching me something my success never could.”
I folded the letter, holding it tightly against my chest. Tears pricked my eyes, but they were tears of genuine warmth.
Hundreds of miles away, in the dark, smoky back room of a Manhattan restaurant, Lucia Moretti sat across from a scarred, heavily tattooed enforcer.
The restaurant was completely empty. The security cameras had been disabled ten minutes prior.
Lucia slid a thick, unmarked envelope across the table. It was stuffed with fifty thousand dollars in untraceable bills.
“Adrian has lost his mind,” Lucia said coldly, sipping her red wine. “He is distracted. He is weak. And in our world, weakness gets our entire bloodline slaughtered.”
The enforcer didn’t touch the envelope yet. “What is the job, Mrs. Moretti?”
Lucia pulled a photograph out of her purse and dropped it onto the table. It was a grainy, zoomed-in picture of me, standing on the porch of the Oakhaven cottage.
“My son is obsessed with a ghost,” Lucia sneered, her eyes flashing with pure malice. “I need you to go to Maine. I need you to permanently eliminate the distraction. Once she is truly gone, Adrian will remember how to be a monster.”
The enforcer looked at the photo, then scooped the heavy envelope of cash into his jacket.
“Consider it done,” the killer replied.
👉 [Tap here for Next Part] 👈