Deputies Walked In While My Sister Posed Beside The Fireplace She Claimed Was Hers-yumihong

The red and blue lights did not reach Bailey’s smile right away.

In the photo she sent me, she was standing beside my stone fireplace with one hip tilted, one hand on the mantel, and my crystal wine glass lifted like she was making a toast. Her veil had slipped low over one shoulder. Travis stood behind her in his loosened bow tie, grinning at the camera with the lazy confidence of a man who thought the locks had already been conquered for him.

Then I noticed the window behind them.

Image

Two stripes of color cut through the dark glass.

Red.
Blue.
Red again.

I held the phone so tightly my IV tape pulled against the skin on the back of my hand.

The officer beside my hospital bed saw my face change.

“Is that current?” he asked.

I turned the screen toward him.

His expression flattened. Not shocked. Not confused. Working.

“That’s the lake house?”

I nodded once because speaking still felt like swallowing broken gravel.

The nurse adjusted the collar of my hospital gown away from the bruises on my neck. The cotton rasped against the swollen skin. The room smelled like antiseptic wipes, coffee gone cold, and the plastic tubing taped to my arm. Somewhere down the hall, a monitor beeped in a steady rhythm that made every second sound documented.

The officer pressed his radio.

“Confirm entry lights visible at the residence. Occupants appear inside. Possible unauthorized entry tied to active assault investigation.”

His words were calm.

That calm did more to scare me than shouting would have.

Marcus was still on speaker. I could hear car noise on his end, the hard rush of tires over highway pavement.

“My dad is calling the attorney,” he said. “My mom is calling the security company. Emma, listen to me. Do not answer your family.”

My phone vibrated before he finished.

Mother.

Then again.

Mother.

Then Bailey.

Then an unknown number.

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