The Smoke Under Room 6 Exposed Why Caleb Rourke Was Buried Twice-thuyhien

The man inside lifted his head, and for one second my hand stayed locked around the broken motel door like my bones had forgotten what doors were for.

Smoke curled from a trash can beside the bed. Not flames yet. Just black paper smoke, bitter and oily, rolling low across the stained carpet. The room smelled like melted plastic, old medicine, cheap bleach, and something sharp enough to sting the back of my throat.

Caleb Rourke sat half-upright against the headboard.

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Eight years of dead man disappeared in one blink.

His beard was white at the edges. His cheeks had sunk in. A strip of medical tape clung to the inside of his elbow, dirty and peeling. His eyes, though—those were Caleb’s. Gray as stormwater. Mean when they needed to be. Tired now, but still measuring exits.

Ellie tried to run past me.

I caught her by the shoulders and pulled her behind my leg.

“Daddy!”

Caleb’s mouth opened, but no sound came out. His eyes jumped to the smoke, then to the bathroom door.

That was when I saw the second man.

He stood near the sink in a tan sport coat, one hand wrapped around a motel Bible, the other holding a lighter. Calm face. Clean shoes. Hair combed like he had somewhere respectable to be after this.

He smiled at me.

“Afternoon, Bishop.”

Tank came in behind me with a fire extinguisher. He didn’t ask. He blasted the trash can until white powder swallowed the smoke and coated the mirror, the bedspread, Caleb’s boots, everything.

Ellie coughed into my denim vest. Her little fingers dug into my belt.

The man in the sport coat raised both hands, still polite.

“No need for theater. I was burning private documents.”

His voice had that courthouse softness. The kind men use when they want witnesses to believe they are reasonable.

Caleb tried to stand and folded at the waist.

I crossed the room in two steps and got a shoulder under him before he hit the floor. He weighed almost nothing. Bone, sweat, fever, and road dust.

“Bishop,” he rasped.

“Don’t talk.”

“Ellie.”

“She’s behind me.”

His eyes shut for half a second. That was the first time I saw his face loosen.

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