The storage facility sat on the edge of town, tucked behind a discount furniture store and a self-serve car wash that always smelled like lemon soap and damp concrete. The sign out front flickered, one letter buzzing like it was about to give up.
HARBORLOCK STORAGE.
I parked two rows away and sat in my car with both hands on the wheel, breathing through my nose like I could calm my body by sheer force. The brass key lay on the passenger seat, catching weak sunlight.
Agent Chen had told me not to go alone. Harper had told me not to play hero.
But the envelope had shown up at my doorstep without a stamp, without an address. Whoever was moving pieces knew where I lived. If I waited, they wouldn’t.
Goal: find what they want before they take it. Conflict: walking into their hands.
I texted Harper anyway. Just two words: Going now.
No response.
My phone showed one bar of service.
“Perfect,” I muttered, and stepped out into air that smelled like wet pavement and cheap pine cleaner. The wind was sharp, cutting through my jacket. Somewhere nearby, a car wash sprayer hissed like a snake.
Inside the storage office, fluorescent lights buzzed overhead. A small space heater whirred in the corner. A man behind the counter chewed gum and watched a tiny TV mounted near the ceiling, where some talk show host was yelling about celebrity divorces.
He barely glanced at me. “Need a unit?”
“I already have one,” I lied, holding up the key like it belonged to me.
He nodded toward the back without care. “Gate code’s on the sign. Units are numbered.”
No ID check. No paperwork. Just the lazy indifference of a place that relies on people not caring enough to break rules.
I walked through the gate, past rows of metal doors that looked like shut mouths. The smell back here was oil and dust and cold steel.
Unit 12 was near the end of a row, slightly tucked away from the main lane. That felt intentional.
My heartbeat thudded in my ears as I approached. I checked over my shoulder twice. No one. Just wind rattling a loose chain-link fence.
The lock on Unit 12 was newer than the others—shiny, unweathered. I slid the brass key into it.
It turned smoothly.
I paused with my hand on the latch, my breath fogging in front of me. My skin prickled with the sense that I was stepping onto a stage where the audience was hidden.
Then I pulled.
The roll-up door screeched as it lifted, metal protesting. Cold air rushed out from inside, carrying the stale scent of cardboard and old fabric.
The unit was half-full.
There were boxes stacked neatly, labeled in thick black marker: OFFICE, TAX, MEDICAL, PHOTOS.
My name was on some of them.
My stomach tightened.
I stepped inside slowly, my shoes crunching on grit. The concrete floor was cold enough to seep through the soles.
On top of the nearest stack sat a slim black notebook wrapped in plastic—too familiar.
I reached for it, fingers shaking.
Before I touched it, I noticed something else: a small digital recorder placed beside the notebook, like a gift.
My throat went dry.
I picked up the recorder. The plastic felt cold and slightly sticky, like someone’s hand had been sweating when they set it down.
I pressed play.
At first, there was only static and a faint hum. Then a voice came through, low and close to the mic.
Bree.
Not the broken whisper I’d heard in the hospital. This was clearer—still strained, but unmistakably her voice. Like she’d recorded it in the brief window when she could speak more, before whatever sedation or damage stole it again.
“Matt,” the recording said, and my chest tightened at how she said my name—like it hurt.
“If you’re hearing this, it means you found Unit 12. It means they’re pushing you. It means I’m probably not there to explain it.”
My mouth went dry. I glanced around the unit, suddenly hyperaware of every shadow.
Bree continued, voice shaking. “There are two books. The one you gave them was never the whole story. I hid the rest because… because I didn’t trust anyone. Not you. Not Alyssa. Not the cops. Not myself.”
Anger flared in me even as my throat tightened.
“I used your name,” Bree admitted, and the words hit like a bruise pressed too hard. “I told myself it was temporary. I told myself I’d fix it before you ever noticed. Then I got scared. Then I got greedy. Then I got in too deep.”
My fingers clenched around the recorder until my knuckles ached.
“There’s evidence in that unit,” Bree said. “Real evidence. Names. Dates. The kind that burns everything down. But Matt… listen to me. If you open the wrong box first, you’ll think I’m the villain. And maybe I am. But I’m not the only one.”
My breath caught. Red herring or truth? My eyes darted to the boxes labeled TAX, OFFICE.
Bree’s voice softened, almost pleading. “Start with PHOTOS. Please. It’ll make the rest make sense.”
Then the recording clicked off.
Silence rushed in, thick and heavy. The storage unit felt suddenly smaller, like the metal walls were inching closer.
I stared at the PHOTOS box, my heart hammering.
Photos could mean anything. Bree and I smiling on vacations. Bree at her desk. Alyssa at family holidays.
Or photos like the Polaroid—proof someone had been watching. Proof of the accident being staged. Proof of who else was involved.
I reached for the PHOTOS box and peeled back the tape with trembling hands. The cardboard gave off a dusty, papery smell.
Inside were envelopes. Some labeled in Bree’s neat handwriting.
One envelope was marked:
ACCIDENT NIGHT.
My stomach dropped.
I slid the photos out. The first image showed our car at the intersection where Bree was hit—headlights glaring, smoke curling into the fog. But the angle was wrong. This wasn’t from a bystander.
This was from above, like from a building… or a camera mounted high.
The second photo showed Bree on a stretcher, her face pale, her hair matted to her forehead.
And in the background, half-hidden near the ambulance door, was someone I recognized instantly.
Mrs. Powell.
Not in her nurse uniform—she wore a dark coat, her peppermint-tea hair tied back, her face turned toward the camera like she’d sensed it.
My lungs stopped working.
Mrs. Powell had been there the night Bree was hit.
My hands shook so hard the photos rattled.
A sound scraped outside the unit—metal on metal.
The roll-up door shuddered.
I spun toward it, heart slamming, and watched in horror as the door began to slide downward from the outside, closing me in.
Through the narrowing gap, I saw a pair of boots planted on the pavement.
And a familiar, calm voice drifted in, almost amused.
“Found what you needed, Matthew?”
The door dropped another foot, and my blood went cold—because if Kellan was here, how long had he been waiting, and what was he going to do now that I’d seen Mrs. Powell in those photos?
