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My new wife’s seven-year-old daughter burst into tears every time we were left alone together. Whenever I gently asked her what was wrong, she would only shake her head silently. My wife would just laugh it off and say, “She simply doesn’t like you.”

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I called Noah right away.

“I’m bringing Harper to your ranch. She stays there until this is over.”

As I drove away from the smoking house, Harper whispered from the back seat, “Mom said the fire would come if I told secrets. She said it would eat the bad people.”

“The fire didn’t eat us,” I said, gripping the wheel. “And it never will.”

With Harper safe at Noah’s ranch under protection Lucas arranged, I returned to Hawthorne Avenue. The house looked like a burned monument to every lie Clara had told.

Lucas met me outside.

“We found Clara’s fingerprints on the paint thinner can,” he said. “But she’ll claim she used it for cleaning. We need her next move.”

“She thinks I’m still trapped,” I said. “She thinks the policy is active. She’ll try again.”

So we let her believe it.

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