That evening you move through your apartment as if the walls have ears. Because they might. Phelps’s team places a discreet recorder in your purse and another under the seam of your jacket. Gabriel helps you back up your phone to a hidden cloud folder and sets location sharing with Elena and the detective. You memorize a sentence you can use if something goes sideways: I forgot my allergy pills in the car. Harmless words. Emergency meaning.
Mauricio comes home with takeout, soft voice, and a plan. You see it before he speaks it, because killers in bad movies are easier to spot than killers in real life only until real life finally shows its teeth. Halfway through dinner he reaches across the table and squeezes your hand.
“I’ve been thinking,” he says. “We’ve had a rough year.”
You lower your eyes just enough. “We have.”
“So let me fix it. Tomorrow night. Just us. A drive out to a little cabin my buddy lets me use sometimes. Lake view, stars, no phones. We cook, talk, start over.”
The invitation lands exactly where the text said it would. Cabin cleaner. You force your shoulders not to tighten. “Tomorrow?”
He smiles. “Yeah. I already took care of everything.”
That sentence lingers after he goes to shower. I already took care of everything. Cleaners use words like that. Men planning a reconciliation do not. You sit at the kitchen table with your pulse banging in your wrists and realize the old version of you, the one who kept translating danger into inconvenience, is gone.
The next day is long enough to feel like two separate lives stitched together badly. In the first, you are a woman putting on jeans, packing a toothbrush, nodding at her husband’s romantic effort, and even slipping on lip gloss because that is what a hopeful wife might do. In the second, hidden under the first like a blade sewn inside a hem, you are cataloging exits, charging two phones, hiding a mini canister of pepper spray in your boot, and repeating Detective Phelps’s instructions until they become muscle memory.
Mauricio drives west just after sunset. The city thins into quieter roads, gas stations, stretches of dark brush, and the kind of Texas horizon that can make a person feel beautiful or erased depending on who they are with. He hums under his breath to a country song on the radio and keeps one hand on the wheel at twelve o’clock like he is auditioning for Normal Husband of the Year. Every ten minutes he glances at you, not tenderly, but to confirm that you are still inside his script.
You pass the turnoff to Medina Lake and keep going.
That is your first shock.