CHAPTER 3 — The Door in the Past
CHAPTER 3 — The Door in the Past
Lucas left the terrace without a word.
No order.
No explanation.
Just movement.
The entire estate staff parted instinctively as he walked through the marble corridor, the bottle still in his hand like evidence in a trial no one agreed to hold.
The boy followed.
No one stopped him.
That alone terrified the guards more than anything.
They entered a private wing of the mansion—sealed, unused, too clean for comfort.
A room that didn’t belong to the present.
Lucas stopped in front of a locked cabinet.
His fingers hesitated for the first time in years.
Then he opened it.
Inside: medical files.
Old prescriptions.
Names crossed out.
Dates rewritten.
And one folder—thicker than the rest.
His wife appeared in the doorway behind them.
Her voice was almost silent.
“You shouldn’t open that.”
Lucas didn’t look at her.
He pulled out the folder.
And read the first line.
His expression didn’t change immediately.
It didn’t need to.
Because the change was happening somewhere deeper.
The boy stepped closer.
“I saw her hide the bottle in the kitchen,” he said. “In the sweet juice like I told you.”
Lucas turned one page.
Then another.
Faster now.
Breathing breaking.
Control dissolving.
The wife rushed forward.
“Lucas, stop—”
He finally looked at her.
And that look…
was not anger.
Not accusation.
It was collapse.
Because the truth wasn’t new.
It was buried.
Intentionally.
Carefully.
For years.
Lucas whispered:
“…you told me she was sick.”
May you like
His wife didn’t answer.
That silence answered everything.