The Locket Named the Poisoner Before the Sheriff Pulled the First Ring From the Pond-QuynhTranJP

The attorney did not raise his voice.

That was what made my mother step backward.

Rain ticked against the porch roof. The pond behind her swallowed every sound except the frogs and the low idle of the sheriff’s SUV. My daughter’s fingers stayed wrapped around the iron bars of the gate, pale at the knuckles, her bare toes curled away from the wet gravel.

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Mom looked at the sealed evidence bag in Sheriff Morrow’s hand.

Inside was my grandmother’s wedding ring, dull gold, dark grit packed into the setting.

Then she looked at me.

For the first time in my life, my mother did not look disappointed. She looked measured. Cornered. Busy.

“Emily,” she said softly, “take Chloe inside before she catches pneumonia.”

I slipped the brass locket into my coat pocket and walked to the gate instead.

Aunt Diane moved first. Not fast enough to seem guilty. Not slow enough to seem innocent. Her sensible black shoes scraped over the gravel as she reached for the latch.

Sheriff Morrow’s deputy stepped between us.

“Ma’am,” he said, “hands where I can see them.”

Diane blinked. Rain clung to the powder in the creases beside her mouth.

“This is family property,” she said.

My attorney, Paul Henson, opened a folder under the shelter of his coat. He was seventy-one, retired twice, and still carried himself like every room had a judge hiding in the corner.

“Not anymore,” he said. “The house, the pond, and the back acreage are held in trust under Eleanor Whitaker’s estate. Emily became acting trustee at 8:00 p.m. tonight.”

Mom’s mouth tightened.

“You had no right to open that locket.”

I kept my eyes on Chloe while the deputy cut the old padlock from the gate. The metal snapped open with a flat, ugly sound.

Chloe stumbled into me. Her pajamas were damp at the hem. Her hair smelled like rain and pond weeds. I wrapped my coat around her shoulders and pressed my palm against the back of her head.

She did not cry.

She watched her grandmother.

That was worse.

Sheriff Morrow walked past us toward the water. Two more deputies climbed from the second vehicle carrying floodlights, yellow tape, and a long metal case.

Mom’s voice stayed calm.

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