The Hidden Camera That Exposed Her Husband’s Deadly Life Insurance Plot-heuh

The living room was ordinary in every way that mattered.

There was a sagging sofa Daniel kept promising to replace.

There was a coffee table with a ring stain from his mother’s favorite mug.

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There was a brass reading lamp I had bought at a yard sale because the shade threw warm light over the room, and there was a wall clock that clicked too loudly when the house went quiet.

There was also a small American flag on the porch outside, snapping in the storm like it had something urgent to say.

That was where they tried to kill me.

Not in a dark alley.

Not in a parking garage.

In the living room where Daniel and I had folded laundry, watched old movies, argued over bills, and once laughed so hard over a burned casserole that I thought marriage might be mostly made of second chances.

The almond sauce was served at 7:08 p.m.

I remember the time because I had trained myself not to trust feelings when facts could survive longer.

Facts had gotten me through six years as a felony prosecutor.

Facts had put violent men in jail when their wives were too scared to testify and their children could only remember the color of the carpet.

Facts had taught me that a person planning harm often rehearses their innocence long before anyone accuses them.

Daniel set my plate down in front of me with both hands.

That was the first thing that bothered me.

He never served me first unless his mother was watching.

Margaret sat across from me in her beige cardigan, pearls tucked against her throat, every hair in place despite the rain tapping against the windows.

She smiled at my plate.

“Try the sauce,” she said. “It took all afternoon.”

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