PART 2: «The Woman They Buried Too Soon»

The chapel erupted, but the maid did not move away.

She dropped the metal tool and grabbed the edge of the broken lid with both hands.

“Help me!” she cried.

For a second, everyone stood frozen.

Then two men rushed forward.

The coffin lid was lifted just enough for air to reach the woman inside.

Emily’s eyes were barely open.

Her lips were pale.

Her hand shook in the light like she had fought her way back from somewhere no one should wake up alone.

The man in the black suit fell to his knees.

“Emily,” he whispered, crying now. “I thought you were gone.”

But Emily’s eyes didn’t go to him first.

They went to the maid.

The young woman was sobbing with relief, her uniform stained from work, her hands cut from the broken edge of the coffin.

Emily’s fingers reached for her.

“You heard me,” she whispered.

The maid nodded, unable to speak.

The man looked between them, confused and trembling.

Emily turned her head slowly toward him.

Her voice was weak, but clear.

“She heard me because she stayed.”

The chapel went silent again.

The maid lowered her eyes.

“I was cleaning after everyone left last night,” she whispered. “I heard tapping. I told them. No one believed me.”

The man’s face collapsed.

Emily’s hand tightened around the maid’s fingers.

“My own family walked away,” she breathed. “But she didn’t.”

The mourners looked down, ashamed now in their black suits and polished shoes.

The man reached for Emily’s hand, but stopped when she turned away.

Then she looked at the maid and whispered, “What’s your name?”

“Anna.”

Emily’s eyes filled with tears.

“Then Anna,” she said softly, “you didn’t break a coffin.”

Her voice trembled.

“You opened a grave they were too rich to question.”

Just as the silver-haired man reached the chapel doors, something unexpected happened.

He stopped.

Slowly.

Deliberately.

Then he turned around and smiled.

A calm, chilling smile that made the entire room uneasy.

“You should have stayed dead, Emily.”

The words hit the chapel like a thunderclap.

Several mourners gasped.

The man in the black suit stepped protectively in front of Emily’s coffin.

“What did you just say?”

But the silver-haired stranger wasn’t looking at him.

His eyes remained fixed on Emily.

And Emily looked terrified.

More terrified than she had been trapped inside a coffin.

Her trembling hand grabbed the man’s sleeve.

“You don’t understand,” she whispered.

“He’s not the one you should be afraid of.”

Silence swallowed the room.

The stranger’s smile vanished.

For the first time, uncertainty crossed his face.

The man in the black suit frowned.

“What are you talking about?”

Emily struggled to sit up.

Every breath seemed painful.

Then she pointed toward the front row.

Toward a woman dressed entirely in black.

A woman who had spent the entire funeral pretending to cry.

The woman’s face instantly lost color.

She stood up.

And before anyone could stop her, she spun around and ran.

The chapel doors slammed open.

People shouted.

Several guests chased after her.

But as she disappeared outside, something slipped from her purse and landed on the marble floor.

A small black envelope.

Sealed with red wax.

The maid picked it up.

Her hands shook as she turned it over.

Written across the front were five chilling words:

“Open only if Emily wakes.”

The maid’s fingers trembled as she held the black envelope.

Nobody wanted to touch it.

Nobody wanted to know what was inside.

Yet everyone needed answers.

Then, from inside the chapel, came a sound that made every head turn.

Emily was laughing.

Not loudly.

Not happily.

A weak, exhausted laugh.

The kind that comes when someone realizes a terrible secret has finally surfaced.

The man in the black suit rushed back to her side.

“Emily, what’s in that envelope?”

Her smile vanished.

For a moment, fear filled her eyes.

Then she whispered three words:

“Don’t open it.”

The room fell silent.

The maid froze.

“What?”

Emily tried to sit up straighter.

“If that envelope is here… then it’s already too late.”

A cold chill swept through the chapel.

The guests exchanged nervous glances.

“What do you mean?” the man asked.

Emily swallowed hard.

“Because the person who wrote it never works alone.”

Suddenly—

A loud crash exploded from outside.

Everyone jumped.

One of the chapel windows shattered.

Glass scattered across the floor.

Screams erupted.

The mourners ducked for cover.

The man shielded Emily as another object flew through the broken window and landed beside the coffin.

A small wooden box.

No larger than a jewelry case.

Tied with a black ribbon.

Attached to it was a note.

The maid slowly picked it up.

Her face turned pale.

“What does it say?” someone shouted.

She stared at the handwriting.

Then looked at Emily.

Then back at the crowd.

Her voice shook.

“It says…”

She stopped.

As if she couldn’t believe the words.

The man stepped closer.

“Read it.”

The maid swallowed.

Then read aloud:

“The envelope reveals the past. The box reveals the killer.”

And before anyone could react—

Tick.

Tick.

Tick.

The sound echoed through the chapel.

Every person in the room froze.

No one dared move closer.

Several mourners backed away in panic.

“Get everyone out!” someone shouted.

Within seconds, people were rushing toward the exits.

But Emily suddenly screamed.

“NO!”

The force of her voice silenced the room.

Her pale face twisted with urgency.

“Don’t move the box!”

The man in the black suit looked at her in disbelief.

“Emily, it could be dangerous!”

“It is dangerous,” she said. “But not for the reason you think.”

The ticking continued.

Steady.

Relentless.

Emily closed her eyes for a moment, gathering strength.

Then she whispered:

“I’ve heard that sound before.”

A cold feeling settled over the chapel.

The maid knelt beside her.

“Where?”

Emily’s eyes slowly opened.

“In my father’s study.”

The room went silent.

Everyone knew her father.

The wealthy businessman whose mysterious death five years earlier had never been solved.

The official report had called it an accident.

Emily had never believed it.

The man in the black suit stared at the box.

“What does it have to do with your father?”

Emily’s lips trembled.

“Because the night he died, he showed me a box exactly like this one.”

A murmur spread through the crowd.

“And inside?” the maid asked softly.

Emily looked toward the shattered window.

Toward the darkness outside.

Then she answered.

“Evidence.”

The word hit like a hammer.

Suddenly, the ticking stopped.

Complete silence filled the chapel.

No ticking.

No breathing.

Nothing.

Then—

Click.

The wooden box slowly sprang open on its own.

Inside was a single photograph.

The man in the black suit picked it up.

His face drained of color instantly.

The maid looked over his shoulder.

Then she gasped.

Because the photograph showed Emily’s father on the night he died.

And standing directly behind him—

smiling at the camera—

was someone currently sitting inside the chapel.

The photograph slipped from the man’s fingers.

It fluttered to the marble floor.

For a moment, nobody moved.

Nobody breathed.

Then an elderly mourner bent down, picked up the photo, and stared at it.

His face turned ghostly white.

“No…”

The word escaped his lips like a prayer.

Across the chapel, heads slowly turned.

Toward the person in the photograph.

A respected figure.

A familiar face.

Someone who had attended every memorial, every family gathering, every holiday dinner for years.

Emily’s aunt.

Margaret.

She remained seated in the front row, dressed in black lace, her hands folded neatly in her lap.

At first, she didn’t react.

Then she smiled.

A small smile.

The kind that made everyone’s stomach tighten.

The man in the black suit stepped forward.

“Margaret… explain this.”

Margaret looked at the photograph.

Then at Emily.

And to everyone’s shock, she began to clap.

Once.

Twice.

Three times.

The sound echoed through the silent chapel.

“Very impressive,” she said calmly.

“After all these years, you finally found it.”

Gasps rippled through the room.

Emily’s eyes widened.

“You knew.”

Margaret nodded.

“Of course I knew.”

The maid instinctively stepped backward.

Something about the woman suddenly felt dangerous.

Not because she was angry.

Because she wasn’t.

She looked completely relaxed.

As if this moment had been expected.

As if she had prepared for it.

Then Margaret slowly reached into her handbag.

Several people cried out.

The man in the black suit lunged forward.

But Margaret simply pulled out a small key.

Old.

Silver.

Worn with age.

She held it up between two fingers.

“You’re all asking the wrong question.”

The chapel fell silent again.

Margaret’s gaze settled on Emily.

“The question isn’t who tried to bury you alive.”

A chill swept through the room.

Emily stared at the key.

She recognized it.

And judging by the terror on her face…

she wished she didn’t.

Margaret’s smile faded.

Her voice dropped to a whisper.

“The real question is why your father hid this key before he died.”

Then she tossed it.

The key landed at Emily’s feet with a metallic clang.

And etched into the handle were four words that changed everything:

“Vault 17 — Open Alone.”

The key spun across the marble floor and came to rest against the coffin.

No one moved.

No one even dared to touch it.

Because the look on Emily’s face said everything.

She knew exactly what Vault 17 was.

And she was terrified of it.

“Emily?” the man in the black suit asked softly.

Her eyes never left the key.

“I thought it was destroyed.”

Margaret laughed.

A low, bitter laugh.

“Your father made sure everyone believed that.”

The chapel grew colder.

Outside, thunder rumbled across the darkening sky.

The maid slowly picked up the key and handed it to Emily.

The moment Emily touched it, tears filled her eyes.

A flood of memories came rushing back.

A hidden room.

A steel door.

Her father’s voice.

A promise.

And a warning.

“If anything happens to me, never open Vault 17 unless you discover who betrayed us.”

Emily’s hands began to shake.

Because now she knew.

Someone had betrayed her father.

Someone had tried to bury her alive.

And somehow, the two secrets were connected.

Then a voice came from the back of the chapel.

“She’s remembering.”

Everyone turned.

An elderly man stood near the entrance.

No one had noticed him arrive.

He wore a dark overcoat despite the warm weather.

His eyes were fixed on the key.

Margaret’s confidence vanished instantly.

For the first time all day, she looked frightened.

The stranger took a slow step forward.

Then another.

“Twenty years,” he said quietly.

“Twenty years I’ve waited for that vault to be opened.”

The man in the black suit frowned.

“Who are you?”

The stranger ignored him.

Instead, he looked directly at Emily.

And spoke a name nobody had heard in years.

A name that made Margaret stumble backward.

A name that had supposedly died alongside Emily’s father.

“Ask the vault about Daniel Cross.”

The chapel erupted into whispers.

Emily’s breath caught in her throat.

Daniel Cross.

Her father’s former business partner.

The man officially blamed for the financial scandal that destroyed several families before disappearing without a trace.

But the stranger’s next words shattered everything they thought they knew.

“Daniel Cross wasn’t the villain.”

He pointed directly at Margaret.

“He was the first victim.”

And before anyone could question him further, a deafening crack of thunder shook the chapel…

…and every light in the building went out.

Darkness swallowed the chapel.

A chorus of screams erupted.

Someone dropped a phone.

Someone else crashed into a row of chairs.

For several terrifying seconds, the only sounds were panic, thunder, and ragged breathing.

Then—

A flashlight beam cut through the darkness.

The maid had switched on her phone light.

Its glow swept across the room.

Across frightened mourners.

Across the open coffin.

Across the shattered window.

Then it stopped.

The beam trembled.

Because Margaret was gone.

A collective gasp filled the chapel.

“Where is she?” someone shouted.

The man in the black suit rushed toward the front row.

The chair where Margaret had been sitting was empty.

But something had been left behind.

A folded piece of paper.

The maid picked it up.

Three words were written across the front.

FOR EMILY ONLY

The lights suddenly flickered back on.

Everyone blinked.

And another scream echoed through the chapel.

This one came from near the entrance.

The mysterious elderly stranger who had mentioned Daniel Cross was lying on the floor.

Motionless.

A small pool of blood was spreading beneath his shoulder.

Not fatal—but enough to prove one thing.

Someone had attacked him during the blackout.

The man groaned weakly.

The black-suited man knelt beside him.

“Who did this?”

The stranger struggled to breathe.

His eyes searched the room.

Then stopped on the note in Emily’s hands.

His expression changed instantly.

Fear.

Pure fear.

“No…” he whispered.

“Don’t read it here.”

Emily stared at the folded paper.

“Why?”

The stranger grabbed her wrist with surprising strength.

“Because if Margaret left that message…”

His voice cracked.

“…then she already knows about the vault.”

Thunder rattled the stained-glass windows again.

The stranger’s grip tightened.

“You have less time than I thought.”

Emily slowly unfolded the note.

Everyone leaned closer.

Inside was a single photograph.

Not a letter.

Not a confession.

A photograph.

Taken only hours earlier.

The picture showed Vault 17.

Its massive steel door standing wide open.

Someone had already gotten inside.

And spray-painted across the empty vault wall were six chilling words:

YOU ARE LOOKING FOR THE WRONG SECRET.

The photograph slipped from Emily’s trembling hands.

For a second, nobody spoke.

Nobody even blinked.

Because if the photo had been taken only hours earlier, then someone had reached Vault 17 before them.

Someone who knew exactly where it was.

Someone who wanted them to see that message.

YOU ARE LOOKING FOR THE WRONG SECRET.

A sudden realization struck Emily.

Her face drained of color.

“Oh my God…”

The man in the black suit turned to her.

“What is it?”

Emily looked up slowly.

“Vault 17 was never supposed to contain evidence.”

The room fell silent.

Even the injured stranger stared at her.

“What do you mean?” the maid asked.

Emily swallowed hard.

“That’s what my father wanted everyone to believe.”

A chill swept through the chapel.

The stranger’s eyes widened.

As if he already knew what she was about to say.

Emily took a shaky breath.

“My father created three vaults.”

The words landed like a bomb.

“Three?” the man asked.

Emily nodded.

“Vault 17 was a decoy.”

Whispers erupted across the room.

“The real secret was never kept there.”

The stranger closed his eyes.

Almost in defeat.

“He figured it out,” he muttered.

Emily turned toward him.

“You knew?”

The old man nodded.

“Your father trusted only three people with the truth.”

“Who?”

The stranger hesitated.

Then answered.

“Your father.”

“Daniel Cross.”

“And…”

His voice trailed off.

A loud ringtone suddenly echoed through the chapel.

Everyone jumped.

The sound was coming from inside the open coffin.

The maid carefully reached in.

Buried beneath the funeral flowers was a cellphone.

Brand new.

No contacts.

No markings.

Just one incoming call.

The screen displayed a single word.

ANSWER.

Nobody moved.

The phone continued ringing.

Once.

Twice.

Three times.

Finally, Emily grabbed it and pressed the speaker button.

Silence.

Then a distorted voice filled the chapel.

A voice that sounded as if it were coming through layers of static.

“Hello, Emily.”

Her heart nearly stopped.

She knew that voice.

Impossible.

Completely impossible.

Tears instantly filled her eyes.

“No…”

The distorted voice chuckled softly.

“You’re asking the wrong questions.”

The chapel stood frozen.

Emily’s lips trembled.

Because she recognized the voice.

It belonged to the one person who should have been dead for twenty years.

Her father.

And then the voice said something that changed everything:

“If you’re hearing this, someone in that chapel murdered me.”

The chapel erupted into chaos.

“What?”

“That’s impossible!”

“He died twenty years ago!”

Voices crashed together as panic spread through the room.

But Emily heard none of it.

She stood frozen, staring at the phone.

Her father’s voice.

The same calm tone.

The same slight pause between sentences.

The same voice that used to read her bedtime stories.

Her hands began to shake.

“Dad?” she whispered.

The recording continued.

“If you’re hearing this, then my worst fear came true.”

The room gradually fell silent again.

Everyone listened.

Even the thunder outside seemed to fade.

“I don’t know who survived long enough to reach this message. Emily, if it’s you, listen carefully.”

A crackle of static interrupted the recording.

Then his voice returned.

“The person who killed me wasn’t after my money.”

Emily’s eyes narrowed.

“The police were wrong. The newspapers were wrong. Even Daniel Cross was wrong.”

The injured stranger suddenly sat upright.

His face had turned pale.

As though he already knew what was coming.

The voice continued.

“The secret I protected was never financial.”

The maid exchanged nervous glances with the others.

Then came a sentence nobody expected.

“It was a person.”

A stunned silence filled the chapel.

A person?

Emily’s heart pounded.

“What person?” she whispered.

As if answering her directly, the recording continued.

“For years, I hid someone from people who would kill to find them.”

The stranger lowered his head.

Margaret’s warning.

The vault.

The attacks.

Suddenly, pieces that made no sense began fitting together.

The phone crackled again.

Then Emily’s father’s voice became urgent.

“If Margaret is still alive, do not trust her.”

Several people exchanged uneasy looks.

“If Daniel Cross is dead, then you’re already in danger.”

The stranger’s eyes widened.

“Dead?” he whispered.

The voice continued.

“And if the person I’m protecting has revealed themselves…”

The recording abruptly stopped.

The screen went black.

“No!” Emily cried.

She pressed the button repeatedly.

Nothing.

The message was over.

For several seconds, the chapel remained completely silent.

Then a slow clap echoed from somewhere above them.

One clap.

Then another.

Everyone looked up.

Toward the chapel balcony.

A lone figure stood in the shadows.

Watching.

Waiting.

The person stepped forward into the light.

Gasps erupted throughout the room.

The stranger stumbled backward.

The maid nearly dropped the phone.

Emily felt her knees weaken.

Because the face staring down from the balcony belonged to a man who looked exactly like the photographs of Daniel Cross.

And his first words were even more shocking.

“My name is Daniel Cross.”

He smiled coldly.

“And your father lied to all of you.”

A bolt of lightning flashed through the stained-glass windows.

For a split second, the entire chapel was illuminated.

And every face in the room showed the same emotion.

Shock.

Daniel Cross was alive.

The man blamed for the scandal.

The man presumed dead.

The man whose name had haunted this family for two decades.

Yet here he stood.

Calm.

Unafraid.

Almost amused.

“You’ve spent twenty years chasing ghosts,” Daniel said as he descended the balcony stairs.

“Your father made sure of that.”

Emily clenched the phone tighter.

“My father said you were innocent.”

Daniel laughed.

A harsh laugh.

“Innocent?”

He stopped halfway down the staircase.

“Emily, your father was many things. Brilliant. Powerful. Dangerous.”

The injured stranger suddenly shouted,

“Don’t listen to him!”

Daniel’s eyes snapped toward the old man.

The smile vanished from his face.

For the first time, anger appeared.

“You should be dead too.”

The chapel fell silent.

The stranger looked away.

And that reaction told everyone something important.

They knew each other.

Very well.

Emily stepped forward.

“Who is he?”

Daniel didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, he looked directly at the stranger.

Then he said a name.

A name that made the old man close his eyes.

“Michael Reed.”

The stranger’s shoulders slumped.

As if he had been carrying that secret for years.

Gasps spread through the room.

Michael Reed.

Her father’s former head of security.

The man who had disappeared the same week her father died.

The man authorities never found.

Emily stared at him.

“You’ve been hiding all this time?”

Michael nodded slowly.

“Because I failed.”

Daniel continued walking down the stairs.

“You didn’t fail.”

Michael looked up.

Then Daniel delivered a sentence that froze the room.

“You helped them.”

The accusation hung in the air.

Heavy.

Deadly.

Michael’s face turned white.

Emily’s heart pounded.

Because suddenly, everyone in the chapel seemed connected to her father’s death.

Daniel.

Margaret.

Michael.

Even the mysterious messages.

Then Emily noticed something.

Something nobody else had seen.

Daniel wasn’t looking at Michael.

He wasn’t looking at her.

His eyes were fixed on the maid.

The young woman in the orange uniform.

The woman who had heard breathing inside the coffin.

The woman who had shattered the lid and saved Emily’s life.

Daniel stared at her with disbelief.

Almost like he was seeing a ghost.

The maid took a nervous step backward.

“Why are you looking at me like that?”

Daniel’s lips parted.

For the first time since appearing, he seemed shaken.

Truly shaken.

Then he whispered seven words that changed the entire mystery:

“Because she’s the person your father hid.”

The chapel went silent.

Not the silence of grief.

Not the silence of shock.

The silence that comes when reality suddenly breaks apart.

The maid stared at Daniel.

“What?”

Her voice barely came out.

Daniel took another step forward.

His eyes never leaving her face.

“You don’t know who you are, do you?”

The young woman shook her head.

Confused.

Terrified.

“I clean hotel rooms for a living.”

Daniel let out a sad laugh.

“No. That’s what you’ve been told.”

Emily looked from Daniel to the maid.

Nothing made sense anymore.

“Stop speaking in riddles,” she demanded. “Who is she?”

Daniel’s jaw tightened.

Before he could answer, Michael Reed suddenly struggled to his feet.

“Don’t.”

The word exploded from him.

Everyone turned.

Michael’s face was full of panic.

The kind of panic a man feels when a secret is seconds away from being exposed.

Daniel pointed at the maid.

“Your father spent millions protecting her.”

The maid’s eyes widened.

Emily felt her heart pounding.

“Why?”

Daniel answered without hesitation.

“Because she inherited something people would kill for.”

A loud crash of thunder shook the chapel.

The lights flickered again.

The maid backed away.

“I don’t understand.”

“You will.”

Daniel reached into his coat.

Several people gasped.

But instead of a weapon, he pulled out an old photograph.

Yellowed by age.

Creased at the corners.

He held it up for everyone to see.

A woman stood in the picture beside Emily’s father.

She was smiling.

Young.

Beautiful.

And holding a baby wrapped in a pink blanket.

The maid froze.

Her breath caught in her throat.

Because the baby’s face…

looked exactly like her.

“No…” she whispered.

The photograph slipped from Daniel’s hand and landed at Emily’s feet.

On the back, written in her father’s handwriting, were eight words:

Protect her until the truth can survive.

A chill swept through the room.

Then Michael Reed did something nobody expected.

He began to cry.

Real tears.

Years of guilt pouring out at once.

“I tried,” he whispered.

Daniel stared at him.

“You failed.”

Michael shook his head.

“No.”

His trembling finger pointed toward the chapel doors.

Toward the darkness outside.

Toward someone nobody had noticed standing there.

A tall figure dressed entirely in black.

Watching.

Waiting.

The figure slowly stepped into the light.

And the moment the maid saw their face…

she screamed.

Because she recognized them.

Even though she had never met them.

The face was the same one she had seen every night in her dreams since childhood.

And the stranger’s first words made the entire chapel freeze:

“Hello, daughter.”

The maid’s scream echoed through the chapel.

Then everything stopped.

Even the stranger standing in the doorway seemed frozen by the sound of it.

“Daughter?”

The word rippled through the crowd.

Impossible.

The maid staggered backward until she nearly collided with Emily’s coffin.

Her breathing became shallow.

Her hands trembled uncontrollably.

“I don’t know you,” she whispered.

But deep inside, something felt familiar.

The stranger slowly removed a black leather glove.

A scar stretched across the back of his hand.

The moment the maid saw it, another memory flashed through her mind.

A little girl.

A rainy night.

A hand reaching for her.

That same scar.

She grabbed her head.

“No…”

Daniel Cross lowered his gaze.

“She’s remembering.”

The stranger took another step forward.

Tears glistened in his eyes.

For the first time, he didn’t look dangerous.

He looked broken.

“I searched for you for twenty years.”

The maid shook her head violently.

“No. I would’ve remembered.”

“You were never supposed to.”

The words came from Michael Reed.

Everyone turned.

The old man looked exhausted.

Defeated.

Like he could no longer carry the weight of the truth.

Emily stepped forward.

“What does that mean?”

Michael closed his eyes.

Then he revealed the secret he had protected for two decades.

“The night your father died wasn’t the beginning.”

A chill swept through the chapel.

“It was the end.”

No one spoke.

No one dared interrupt.

Michael pointed toward the maid.

“Someone tried to kill her when she was a child.”

Gasps erupted around the room.

The maid stared at him.

“What?”

“You were only four years old.”

Michael’s voice cracked.

“There was a fire.”

The stranger in black lowered his head.

Pain flashed across his face.

“A fire that wasn’t an accident.”

Emily felt her stomach twist.

Everything was changing again.

The scandal.

The vault.

The murder.

The coffin.

None of it had been the real story.

Michael swallowed hard.

“Your father risked everything to save her.”

Daniel nodded slowly.

“Because if she lived…”

His voice trailed off.

The chapel waited.

The maid waited.

The stranger waited.

Then Daniel finished the sentence.

“…an empire would fall.”

A stunned silence followed.

The maid stared at him.

“What empire?”

Daniel looked toward the shattered chapel window.

Toward the storm outside.

Then he spoke a name that made several mourners gasp in horror.

A name powerful enough to silence the room.

A family name.

A dynasty.

A name connected to judges, politicians, billionaires, and decades of hidden influence.

And according to Daniel Cross…

the maid was the rightful heir to all of it.

But before he could explain further—

A gunshot shattered the silence.

The chapel windows exploded inward.

People screamed.

Someone had been waiting outside.

And they had just decided the maid knew too much.

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