The Easter Video That Turned a Mansion’s Perfect Dinner Into a Crime Scene-samsingg

The first siren reached the marble steps before Simon understood I had not called for permission.

Red and blue light washed across the white walls, over the pastel eggs, over Meredith Thorne’s pearl necklace, over the blood spreading into the Persian rug. The music outside kept playing for three more seconds, cheerful and thin, before someone finally shut it off.

Callie’s fingers tightened once around my shirt.

I kept my hand over hers.

Simon looked past me toward the driveway. His cufflink dangled loose from one sleeve, silver flashing against his wrist. For the first time since I had walked in, his face did not look expensive. It looked bare.

Meredith lowered her mimosa carefully onto the console table.

“Robert,” she said, using my first name like she had earned it, “this is a family misunderstanding.”

I looked at my daughter’s throat.

“No,” I said. “It’s not.”

The front doors opened hard enough to strike the wall.

Captain Daniel Rhodes came in first, gray-haired, broad-shouldered, wearing the same unreadable face he used to wear when we walked into houses where nobody wanted uniforms inside. Two officers came behind him. An EMS crew followed with a stretcher and a trauma bag.

Nobody ran.

That mattered.

They moved fast, but not messy. Gloves snapped. Radios clicked. Boots crossed polished marble. A female paramedic dropped beside Callie and slid two fingers against her neck.

“Pulse rapid,” she said. “Respirations shallow. Possible head injury. Possible strangulation. Get the collar.”

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