The Military K9 Who Guarded the Room That Hid His Mother’s Truth-eirian

By the time Commander Elias Vane reached Black Hollow, the rain had turned the mountain road into a ribbon of black glass.

He had flown home from Syria with a folded uniform in his bag and a grief he had not yet touched. His mother’s funeral was already over. That was the first wrong thing. The second was the silence inside the Oregon mansion.

The third was Titan.

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The retired Belgian Malinois sat at the end of the hall outside Margaret Vane’s study and refused to move.

Titan was eleven. His hips ached in cold weather. His muzzle had gone silver. But Elias had seen that dog find explosives buried under roads, stop men twice his size, and wake from a dead sleep because a door opened wrong three rooms away. Titan did not waste warnings.

Victor Hale did.

Elias’s stepfather came across the marble foyer with a folder tucked under one arm and sympathy arranged carefully on his face. Everything about him looked expensive. The suit. The watch. The polished shoes. Even his grief looked tailored.

“You should rest,” Victor said. “The lawyers have already handled the estate.”

Titan growled.

Not a bark. Not confusion. A low sound built for one purpose: keep away.

Elias looked from the dog to the folder.

“What lawyers?”

Victor opened the folder on the dining table. Fresh papers. Fresh signatures. Fresh lies. He said Margaret had changed her will three weeks before her death. He said Black Hollow now belonged to him. He said she was hurt that Elias had chosen deployments over family.

That last sentence told Elias more than the papers did.

It was too clean.

Too practiced.

His mother had never spoken that way. Not once.

Elias picked up the will. Victor’s hand tightened on it before letting go. That was the fourth wrong thing.

The signature was almost perfect. Almost. Margaret Vane had signed her name with a small lift at the end, a habit she kept from old fountain pens and handwritten letters. This signature ended flat.

A civilian might have missed it.

A son did not.

“You forged this,” Elias said.

Victor’s face tightened. “That is a serious accusation.”

Titan moved before Elias answered. The dog placed himself between them, body stiff, eyes fixed on Victor’s sleeve. Elias saw it then: scratches across Victor’s wrist, hidden badly beneath his cuff.

Titan had drawn those marks.

Recently.

Elias crouched and touched the matching cuts on the dog’s muzzle. Titan whined once, then turned toward the study door again.

The study was locked.

Margaret had lived in that room. She paid bills there, read there, wrote letters there. After Elias’s father died in a naval operation, she had built Black Hollow out of discipline, grief, and stubbornness. The study held her life.

Victor stepped forward. “The attorney said nobody enters until probate is finished.”

Elias did not look at him. “The attorney can wait.”

Titan walked to the bookcase beside the study door and slammed his body against it.

A painting fell.

Behind it was a wall safe.

Victor went pale so fast Elias almost smiled.

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