“You refused my letters?”
No answer.
Then the sheriff pulled out a folder.
His face hardened immediately.
“This is a power of attorney.”
My name was typed neatly across the top.
My forged signature sat at the bottom.
Beneath it were bank statements, loan paperwork, and a deed transfer for my grandmother’s little blue house on Cedar Lane—the house Grandma Evelyn had left to me before I enlisted.
Dad cracked the front door just enough for one eye to appear.
“She gave us permission,” he snapped.
“No, I didn’t.”
My mother’s voice came sharp through the opening.
“You abandoned this family.”
“I served my country.”
“You left us with debt!”
I almost laughed from disbelief.
“So you told everyone I was in prison?”
Pastor Glenn suddenly stepped backward.
I recognized the look on his face immediately.
Not surprise.
Recognition.
Sheriff Walker noticed it too.
“Pastor?”
Pastor Glenn’s lips trembled.
“Donna told the church Sarah had fallen into addiction,” he admitted quietly. “She said the family needed privacy. We raised money for legal expenses.”
The entire street exploded with shocked voices.
“How much money?” I asked.
He stared at the pavement.
“Close to seventy thousand dollars.”
My knees nearly gave out.
Then an old black pickup truck rolled slowly to the curb.
The moment my father saw it, he disappeared from the doorway.
The driver stepped out.
Heavyset.
Wrinkled suit jacket.
Thick neck.
And instantly familiar.
I had seen him years earlier in one of Dad’s business files.
Walter Briggs.
The mortgage broker.
He looked at me standing there in uniform and smiled grimly.
“Well,” he muttered, “looks like the dead daughter finally came home.”
The street froze.
“Dead?” I whispered.
Sheriff Walker turned sharply toward him.
“What does that mean?”
Walter shrugged.
“Her parents filed paperwork over a year ago claiming she was missing and presumed dead overseas. That’s how they pushed the property transfer through.”
“That’s impossible,” I said. “The Army would notify family directly.”
“They never used the Army,” Walter replied. “They used forged documents, a pastor willing to trust them, and a town that already believed she was a criminal.”
The front curtains twitched.
Then I saw my mother inside holding a phone against her ear.
And I watched her mouth form three words I will never forget.
Burn the garage.
“Burn the garage,” I repeated aloud.
Sheriff Walker spun instantly toward the detached garage behind the house.
Smoke curled beneath the side door.