My husband changed the locks on our mansion while I was at my mother’s funeral, texting me: “You took too long to grieve. Pack your things

On my tablet, the status of my home’s network blinked in real-time.

Target Profile: David Thorne.

Facial Recognition Database: Purged.

Biometric Access: Revoked.

Gate Transponder: Disabled.

Within seconds, the mansion’s sprawling smart-home system—which David proudly controlled from an app on his phone, treating it like his personal toy—was severed.

I tapped a command on my screen…

The scent of rubbing alcohol and wilting lilies is something that never truly washes out of your clothes. It weaves itself into the fabric, a permanent olfactory reminder of the precise moment your world began to hollow out. For three relentless, agonizing days, I had been breathing it in. I sat beside my mother’s bed in the private palliative care wing of Cedars-Sinai, watching the steady, cruel descent of her vital signs. My mother, Eleanor Vance, was a woman who had carved an empire out of granite, a woman who commanded boardrooms with a whisper. Now, her breaths were shallow, fragile things, fluttering like trapped moths against her ribcage.

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