He Played The Recording In Front Of His Daughter—Then The Detective Outside Moved In-QuynhTranJP

Stephanie’s question stayed in the room longer than Derek did.

“Is any of it true?”

She said it from behind him, so quietly that the old wall clock almost swallowed it. Derek had one hand on my front doorknob. His shoulders were high inside his dark jacket, the same jacket he wore when he came to my house alone and wrapped his fist in my collar like my age made me easy to move.

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He did not turn around right away.

Rain slid down the window in narrow silver lines. The red-blue flicker from the unmarked car outside brushed across the wet sidewalk and vanished. My phone was still on the coffee table. The recording had ended, but the room still felt full of his voice.

The threats.

The property.

The line about dying forgotten.

Derek finally looked over his shoulder, not at Stephanie first, but at the folder on the table. Washington complaints. Printed license records. Names of elderly investors. The license plate report Frank had helped capture. He stared at those pages like paper had become a locked door.

“Stephanie,” he said, soft and careful, “your father doesn’t understand what he’s doing.”

She stood behind him with both hands at her sides. Her fingers flexed once, then curled into her palms.

“That’s not what I asked.”

His mouth moved before words came out. For the first time since I had met him, Derek Marsh looked unrehearsed.

He had always been polished. Even his pauses had felt practiced. At dinner, when he asked for $40,000, he lowered his voice at exactly the right places. When I refused, he smiled with exactly the right amount of injury. When he sat in Carol’s chair and called my refusal a failure of fatherhood, he sounded like a man explaining morality to someone beneath him.

Now his collar sat too tight against his throat.

“You’ve been manipulated,” he told her. “He’s been building this against me for weeks.”

Stephanie looked at the phone. Then at the folder. Then at me.

I did not explain. Not yet.

I had spent weeks learning that the truth loses strength when you push it too hard. Derek survived by filling silence first. So I left the silence there for him.

Outside, a car door opened.

Derek heard it too.

Detective Angela Moore stepped onto the sidewalk in a dark raincoat, her partner beside her. She did not rush. That was the thing about her that had struck me from the first morning in Thomas’s office. She moved like someone who had seen panic in every form and did not need to borrow any of it.

Derek’s hand left the doorknob.

“George,” he said, but my name did not sound like a threat now. It sounded like a request he had not earned.

I walked to the window and looked out. Detective Moore stood near Derek’s car, speaking into her radio. Her partner wrote something on a small pad. Rain darkened the shoulders of both their coats.

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