My mom was sentenced to die for killing my dad, and for six years

My mom was sentenced to die for killing my dad, and for six years

“The boy is traumatized,” Ray stammered, his voice cracking like dry wood. “He’s been through a tragedy. He’s making up stories to cope!”

But the Warden wasn’t listening to Ray. He was looking at the key in his palm. It was an old-fashioned skeleton key, rusted at the edges but solid. He signaled to the guards. “Hold him,” he commanded, pointing at Ray. “And call the District Attorney’s office. Now.”

“You can’t do this!” Ray screamed as two guards grabbed his arms. “This is a legal execution! You have a warrant!”

“I have a witness,” the Warden countered, his voice cold as iron. “And I have new evidence.”
The Descent into the Past

While the prison became a whirlwind of legal chaos, the execution was stayed—not canceled, but frozen in time. My mother was taken back to a holding cell, her face a map of shock and burgeoning hope. Matthew and I were ushered into a small, sterile office.

Matthew sat on the edge of a plastic chair, his feet dangling. He looked so small, yet he had carried a mountain for six years. I knelt in front of him, my hands shaking.

“Matthew,” I whispered, “why didn’t you tell me? Why didn’t you tell the police?”

His lower lip trembled. “Uncle Ray told me he’d kill you, Sarah. He said the police were his friends and they’d help him bury you in the woods behind the house. He said… he said Dad died because he couldn’t keep a secret, and I had to be better at it.”

A cold chill washed over me. For six years, I had lived under the same roof as a monster, eating the food he bought with my father’s money, while he held a metaphorical gun to my little brother’s head.
The Secret Drawer

The Warden returned two hours later, accompanied by a frantic-looking detective and a forensic locksmith. They had gone to our old house—the house Ray had claimed as his own.

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