Every night, I planned.
Michael knew the estate’s guts better than anyone. While I lay on the couch with a notepad balanced on my knees, he walked me through everything.
“The main entrance is heavily guarded,” he said. “Face recognition, ID badges, rotating guards David trusts. But there are service entrances. Delivery docks. Camera blind spots.”
We sketched maps from memory. Which hallways led to which towers. Where the security control rooms were. How the cameras were wired.
“Some of the workers will help you,” he added. “Not all. Most of the guards answer to him. But there are people who loved your parents. People who saw enough that day to know something was wrong.”
I thought of the article headline. FULL OWNERSHIP. SISTER LEFT COUNTRY. Some blog had already spun it into a click-bait story: HEIRESS DISAPPEARS AFTER PARENTS’ DEATH, BROTHER TAKES CONTROL OF BILLION-DOLLAR DREAM. The comment sections were full of strangers across America and beyond guessing what had happened to me. None of them knew I was alive in a narrow Miami apartment, plotting my brother’s downfall with a construction worker and a cheap ballpoint pen.
I didn’t rush. I couldn’t. Rushing was how you slipped from balconies.
Instead, when I could walk almost without wincing, I took the money I still had access to through an old personal account—one David hadn’t frozen or maybe didn’t realize existed—and rented a small office space close to the estate. Nothing fancy. Just four walls, a window with a partial view of the Collins grounds, and enough privacy for me to watch without being watched.
From there, I observed.
Through binoculars sometimes, through open blinds, through traffic, I watched black SUVs come and go through the estate gates. I watched delivery trucks roll in. I watched construction workers file in at dawn, shuffle out at dusk. I watched helicopters thrum overhead, sometimes landing on the estate’s private helipad, sometimes continuing on toward downtown.
Sometimes local news vans parked near the gates, reporters doing quick stand-up shots with the estate in the background, talking about “one of the most ambitious private developments in the United States,” and about its “charismatic but controversial new face, David Collins.”
They tried to make him sound charming.
But I knew what lay behind his tailored suits and rehearsed smiles: someone who had kicked his own sister off a balcony and then gone on TV to talk about growth projections and community initiatives.
A week after I moved into the office, I walked through the estate gates for the first time since my fall.
I didn’t wear anything that would draw attention. Just jeans. A loose black T-shirt. Sunglasses. My long black braids braided back into a simple ponytail. No designer handbag. No high heels. Just comfortable sneakers and the kind of presence people overlook when they assume power always looks expensive.
Security at the gate barely glanced at me. Women in plain clothes walked in and out of the estate all the time—consultants, staff, interns, girlfriends of contractors. I blended into that stream, kept my head slightly down as if my only concern was my phone.
Once inside, I moved like a ghost. I already knew where the cameras were. Michael had drilled their positions into my memory. I knew where to walk fast, where to slow down, when to pretend to be lost, when to slip through a side door like I belonged there.
The smell hit me first—cement dust, steel, fresh paint, the chemical tang of new flooring and varnish. It was the scent of something half-finished and full of promise. It reminded me of my father’s voice as he’d said, “One day, people will fly from all over the country to shop, live, and work here. This will be our family’s legacy, Mary.”
Our family.
I made my way to the tower. The tower. The one he had used as his weapon.
On one of the lower levels, a worker walked past me, carrying a roll of electrical cables across his shoulders. I recognized his face—the quick glance upward as I’d fallen, the terror in his eyes as he’d watched my body drop. Now, when his gaze brushed mine, he froze.
“Luis,” I said quietly, calling his name.
His eyes widened. The cable roll slipped from his shoulder and thudded to the floor.
“Señorita…” His voice broke. “We thought you—”
“I know what he did,” I said, keeping my voice low, steady. “I know he tried to kill me. And I know you saw enough to know it wasn’t an accident.”
His throat bobbed as he swallowed. He looked around quickly, making sure no one was close enough to hear. “People talk,” he whispered. “But we are scared. He has money. Lawyers. Security. We have families.”
“I’m not asking you to confront him,” I said. “I’m asking for your eyes. Your ears. When the time comes, I’ll need people who are willing to tell the truth. Can I count on you?”
His answer came in a rush. “Anything, ma’am. Anything.”
Hope, small but sharp, lodged in my chest. One ally. One step.
I didn’t make it to the balcony that day. I’d barely taken three more steps down the corridor when a voice cut through the air, a voice I’d heard in nightmares and in news clips, smooth and dangerous.
“Mary.”
My blood went cold.
I turned.
David stood at the far end of the hallway, framed by the harsh fluorescent lights, his dark skin flushed with color, his body stiffer than I’d ever seen it. For a second, he looked almost humanly stunned, like a man who’d just seen a ghost.
“Incredible,” he said, recovering quickly, his lips curling into a slow, incredulous smile. “You really don’t know when to stay gone, do you?”
My heart pounded, but something in me refused to show it. I stepped out of the shadows and squared my shoulders.
“You thought you could erase me,” I said. “You were wrong.”
He walked toward me, each step measured, polished shoes tapping against the concrete. His eyes flicked over me, assessing: my posture, my clothes, the lack of visible bruises. Calculating, always calculating.
“Do you have any idea what you’re doing?” he asked, his voice a low, controlled rumble. “This estate, everything you’re standing on—I built this. I kept it alive while you… what? Played dead? Hid?”
“You didn’t build anything,” I shot back. “Mom and Dad built this. Their people built this. Their dream built this. You tried to steal it. There’s a difference.”
His face darkened. “You survived one fall,” he said. “You’re lucky. Don’t push your luck.”
I took a slow breath. Weeks of planning clicked into place in my head like gears in a machine. The time for hiding was over.
“Luck didn’t make the foam stacks appear where I landed,” I said. “Mom’s safety protocols did. Dad’s insistence on over-ordering materials did. The way this place was designed to protect workers, not heirs, did. The same people you’ve been underpaying and threatening since they died are the ones who saved my life. Not you.”
His jaw flexed. “You think anyone will believe your little story?” he asked, low and dangerous. “In case you haven’t noticed, little sister, the United States loves a confident billionaire. They love an orphan who steps up and takes over the family legacy. They love a narrative. And I gave them one. The reckless sister, the tragic accident, the responsible brother who keeps everything together. You’re too late.”
He was wrong. About a lot of things.
Most of all, he was wrong about timing.
“I don’t need them to love my narrative,” I said calmly. “I just need the truth to be loud enough that the right people hear it.”
Behind him, down the hall, a door opened. Two workers stepped out, their eyes catching mine for a second before sliding toward David. They didn’t move closer, but they didn’t walk away either.
Michael had told me it would be like this. First curiosity. Then doubt. Then courage.
I moved to the security panel on the wall. Michael had drawn this exact panel for me a dozen times on the office whiteboard. Panel code. Camera routes. Door locks. A hidden override my father had insisted on for emergencies.
“Don’t,” David said sharply when he saw me reach for it.
“Why?” I asked, fingers hovering above the keypad. “Afraid of what happens if the cameras stop rolling and you don’t control the angles?”
He took a step toward me. I entered the code.
One beep. Two. Three.
The cameras on that floor went black.
For the first time since I’d woken up on that foam, we were in a space that didn’t belong entirely to him.
Doors clicked as locks released. In the distance, I heard the echo of heavier doors opening. The estate’s bones shifting.
“Mary,” David hissed. “What did you do?”
“I turned off your favorite audience,” I said softly. “Now you’re just a man in a hallway, talking to the sister you tried to murder.”
He laughed once, a short, harsh sound. “Murder,” he repeated, as if tasting the word. “That’s a strong accusation in this country. Are you planning to tell that to the cops? To the DA? You think they’ll take your word over mine? Over the paperwork? Over the narrative I’ve already fed every outlet that matters?”
“Yes,” I said. “Because when they come, they won’t just hear my word. They’ll hear theirs.”
As if on cue, footsteps sounded at both ends of the hallway.
Workers. Electricians. Site supervisors. Men and women with hard hats dangling from two fingers, with dust still on their boots. Faces I knew. Faces that had watched me fall. Faces that had watched David pretend nothing was wrong.
They moved in quietly, not rushing him, not attacking him. Just surrounding him with the quiet, unshakable presence of people who had finally picked a side.
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