The Sheriff Arrived After My Husband’s Perfect Alibi Exposed the One Photo He Forgot-QuynhTranJP

The sheriff did not knock twice.

The doorbell was still vibrating through the wall when Mark’s hand lowered from my phone, finger by finger. Dana stood beside the breakfast nook with my father’s brass key trapped in her fist, her knuckles turning the color of candle wax.

Rain pressed against the kitchen windows. The receipts on the marble island lifted at the corners when the air conditioner clicked on. Mark’s $27 bourbon receipt sat on top of the stack like it had been placed there by a museum curator.

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My attorney’s message glowed on my screen.

Sheriff is at your front door. Do not open it alone.

Mark looked at the phone, then at the hallway.

“Claire,” he said softly, “whatever you think this is, you need to be careful.”

That was the tone he used for waiters, bank clerks, and women he thought were already cornered.

I slid the phone into the back pocket of my jeans and picked up the nearest receipt instead. The paper was warm from the lights. My thumb left a faint mark across the hotel logo.

“You told me the cameras were down,” I said.

His eyes moved to Dana.

Dana looked at the floor.

The doorbell rang again.

This time, Mark flinched.

I walked around the island without hurrying. Every step felt loud against the tile. Behind me, Dana whispered, “Mark,” but he did not answer her.

At the front door, I looked through the side window.

A sheriff’s deputy stood under a black umbrella on the porch, rain dripping off the brim of his hat. Beside him was a woman in a beige trench coat holding a hard plastic document case against her chest.

My attorney, Patricia Bell.

She was sixty-two, small, and built like a locked filing cabinet. Silver hair pinned tight. Brown eyes sharp behind rain-speckled glasses. She had handled my father’s estate, my shop lease, my first vendor contract, and every mistake I had been too young to know I was making.

I opened the door with the chain still on.

Patricia lifted one finger.

“Chain stays on until Deputy Morris confirms everyone’s position.”

Behind me, Mark said, “This is ridiculous.”

Deputy Morris turned his head toward the sound.

“Sir, step away from Mrs. Bennett and keep both hands visible.”

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