“No,” you said each time. “No. No. No.”
The detective, a woman in her fifties with tired eyes and a calm voice, took the marriage certificate from an evidence bag and asked, “You married Miguel Alvarez in 2018?”
“Yes.”
“And to your knowledge, he was legally free to marry?”
“Yes.”
She nodded once. Not skeptical. Just filing facts into the place where facts wait to become dangerous.
They took the phone. The letters. The purse. The clothes. The whole mattress too. When they rolled it through your hallway and out the front door, the raw rectangle left on the floor looked obscene, like a wound you had been sleeping above.
That first night alone after the discovery, you did not stay in the house.
You packed a duffel, drove to a hotel near the airport, and sat fully dressed on top of the comforter until dawn. Every sound in the hallway made your shoulders lock. Every time the AC clicked on, you smelled phantom mildew and rot. You kept picturing Miguel’s face when he told you to stop touching the bed. The intensity of it. The fear.
It hadn’t been about the mattress.
It had been about what the mattress knew.
By the next afternoon, Detective Harper called.
“We found a report connected to the name Elena Morales,” she said. “She was reported missing nine years ago.”
Your grip tightened on the phone until your knuckles whitened.
“Nine years?”
“Yes. Missing out of Flagstaff. The report was filed by her sister.”
Nine years ago.
One year before you married Miguel.
The floor of your hotel room might as well have dissolved.
“She vanished,” Harper continued. “According to the file, she left work one Friday and never came home. Her car was found at a trailhead two days later. There was some suspicion she might have walked away voluntarily, but nothing conclusive.”
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