My daughter-in-law called to tell me my son had died and that I wouldn’t receive a single cent. I just smiled, because at that very moment, my son was sitting right next to me—alive, breathing, and listening to every word. Patricia spoke with the voice of a grieving widow. Julian squeezed my hand under the table. And when she said, “He won’t be in the way anymore,” I knew that the trap that had almost killed him had just snapped shut on her.

 

PART 1 OF 2

PART 2: THE TATTOO
Julian stared at the photograph.
His face drained of color.
“No…” he whispered.
I grabbed the edge of the table.
“What is it?”
Julian took a shaky breath.
“I know that tattoo.”
Mr. Morris leaned closer.
“Who is he?”
My son swallowed.
“The tattoo belongs to Gabriel.”
The room fell silent.
I frowned.
“Gabriel who?”
“My cousin.”
The photograph slipped from his fingers.
Three years earlier, Gabriel had vanished without warning.
Everyone believed he had run away after gambling debts piled up.

The family searched.
The police searched.
Nothing.
He had simply disappeared.
Until now.
Mr. Morris looked horrified.
“You think Patricia used Gabriel’s body?”
Julian nodded slowly.
“I think Gabriel never disappeared.”
My stomach twisted.
I remembered Patricia attending family gatherings.
Always smiling.
Always asking questions.
Always listening.

What if she had known exactly what happened to Gabriel?

Then another realization struck me.

The corpse had been prepared to become Julian.

Not merely hidden.

Replaced.

Someone had planned this long before the poisoning.

This wasn’t panic.

This was preparation.

Months of preparation.

Maybe years.

Suddenly Julian’s phone vibrated.

The screen lit up.

UNKNOWN NUMBER.

We exchanged glances.

Julian answered.

Silence.

Then a voice.

A man’s voice.

Low.

Calm.

Dangerous.

“You should have stayed dead.”

The call ended.

PART 3: THE MAN WHO KNEW

Nobody spoke.

The fan creaked overhead.

Julian replayed the call three times.

The voice sounded familiar.

Not completely.

Just enough to bother him.

Then his eyes widened.

“I know where I’ve heard him.”

“Who?” I asked.

Julian looked at Mr. Morris.

“The security director.”

Mr. Morris froze.

“Arthur?”

Julian nodded.

Arthur had worked for the company for nearly fifteen years.

Loyal.

Trusted.

Invisible.

The kind of man nobody noticed.

The kind of man who knew everything.

Every password.

Every schedule.

Every camera.

Every weakness.

“That’s impossible,” Mr. Morris said.

But even he didn’t sound convinced.

Julian limped toward the laptop.

He opened old company files.

Photos.

Meetings.

Security reports.

Then he stopped.

“There.”

A photograph from a company retreat.

Patricia stood near the pool.

Arthur stood beside her.

Their hands were touching.

Not accidentally.

Intimately.

Secretly.

Like two people who thought nobody was watching.

My heart sank.

Patricia wasn’t acting alone.

She never had been.

At that exact moment, another message appeared on Julian’s phone.

A photograph.

Taken only minutes earlier.

My house.

My front porch.

And beneath it, a single sentence:

WE KNOW WHERE YOU ARE.

PART 4: SOMEONE INSIDE THE HOUSE

I felt my knees weaken.

The photograph had been taken recently.

Very recently.

The flower pot beside the door had been knocked over by yesterday’s storm.

The photo showed it exactly that way.

Which meant whoever sent it had been outside our house within the last few hours.

Maybe minutes.

Julian grabbed the curtains and looked outside.

Nothing.

Quiet street.

Children riding bicycles.

An old woman watering roses.

Normal.

Too normal.

Mr. Morris locked the front door.

Then the back door.

Then every window.

For the first time, I saw fear in his eyes.

“We have a bigger problem.”

Julian looked at him.

“What?”

Mr. Morris pulled a folded document from his jacket.

“The hospital called me before I came here.”

He unfolded the paper.

It was a visitor log.

A list of names.

People who had entered the private hospital during Julian’s recovery.

One name was highlighted.

My blood froze.

ELENA MARTINEZ.

My name.

My signature.

My identification number.

Someone had entered the hospital pretending to be me.

Someone who wanted access to my wounded son.

Someone who almost reached him.

Julian looked up slowly.

“Mom…”

I could barely breathe.

Because I had never stepped foot inside that hospital.

PART 5: THE WOMAN WHO WORE MY FACE

I stared at the visitor log.

My name.

My signature.

My identification number.

Every detail was perfect.

Too perfect.

Julian looked at me.

“Mom, are you sure you’ve never been to that hospital?”

I almost laughed.

“Julian, I don’t even know where it is.”

Mr. Morris pointed at the highlighted entry.

“The strange part isn’t that someone used your name.”

“Then what is it?”

“The visitor arrived twenty minutes before the poisoning attempt.”

The room went silent.

Whoever she was, she wasn’t visiting.

She was hunting.

The next morning, we drove to the hospital.

A nurse brought up security footage.

There she was.

A woman wearing sunglasses.

Dark hair.

My height.

My build.

Even the way she walked looked like me.

But when she turned toward the camera, my blood froze.

It wasn’t a stranger.

It was someone from our family.

Someone who had eaten at my table.

Someone who had hugged me at Christmas.

Julian leaned closer to the screen.

“No…”

The woman removed her glasses.

My niece, Sofia.

And behind her stood Patricia.

PART 6: EYES IN THE WALLS

Sofia disappeared before we could reach her.

Her phone was disconnected.

Her apartment was empty.

No forwarding address.

No explanation.

Only silence.

That night, I couldn’t sleep.

Something felt wrong.

The house felt different.

Smaller.

Watching.

At two in the morning, I walked into the kitchen for water.

A tiny red light blinked behind the microwave.

I froze.

Then I pulled the appliance away from the wall.

A camera.

Small.

Hidden.

Recording.

My heart began pounding.

I checked the living room.

Another camera.

The hallway.

Another.

My bedroom.

Another.

Someone had been watching us.

Listening.

Learning.

Every conversation.

Every plan.

Every secret.

Julian immediately called a security specialist.

By dawn, they found six cameras.

But the final discovery terrified us.

One camera had been installed only forty-eight hours earlier.

After Julian arrived.

Which meant someone had entered the house recently.

Someone with a key.

Someone we trusted.

Then the specialist handed us a memory card.

“There’s one video you need to see.”

The recording began.

A shadow entered my house.

Walked directly to Julian’s room.

And whispered:

“Next time, you won’t survive.”………….

Next Part 2