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Drama Suspense Fiction

This story contains sensitive content

Content Warning: This story contains themes of family conflict, trauma, betrayal, and self-harm, which may be distressing to some readers.

“I didn’t kill him, but I handed him the gun,” my father told me. He was on hospice, on his last stretch of breath, and he had just revealed to me a deep, dark secret.

“Why didn’t you tell me sooner?” I asked, my voice steady, though my thoughts churned in shock.

The room felt suffocating, as though the very air carried the weight of his words. Shadows clung to the corners, the single lamp on the bedside table casting a weak, jaundiced glow over everything it touched. The ticking of an old clock on the wall punctuated the silence, each second a sharp reminder of how little time we had left.

James Tredway, my father, lay sunken into the hospital bed, his body thin and frail, his skin almost translucent. The oxygen tubes in his nose hissed faintly, but they didn’t ease the wheezing rattle that accompanied every labored breath. Lung cancer had stripped him of everything—his strength, his weight, even the booming voice that used to echo through this house.

I stared at him, my mind splintering into jagged fragments, trying to make sense of what he had just said. I didn’t kill him, but I handed him the gun. The words were heavier than the room, suffocating me in a way I hadn’t expected.

“I couldn’t face the aftermath,” my father finally said, his voice like that of a mouse. “Of what you would do. It’s going to happen one way or another, I know. It’s unpardonable.” He took a deep breath, exhaled. “I only hoped he would have done the right thing.”

A storm raged inside me—a hurricane of anger, disbelief, and a nauseating wave of fear I couldn’t shake. My jaw tightened as I wrestled with the chaos. I wanted to scream, to demand answers, but my body betrayed me. I sat there, motionless, like an anchor in the tempest.

The clock ticked on. The heart monitor beeped, each sound a quiet dirge.

His words repeated in my mind, their weight growing with each pass. He had carried this secret for years, living with it in silence, and now he’d placed it on me as his final act. But why now? Why wait until the edge of death to tell me?

The anger clawed at my insides, begging to be unleashed, but I held it back, my fists digging into my thighs with a force that made them ache. I was calm—too calm—the kind of calm that felt like a brittle dam straining against a raging flood.

Sandy’s laugh echoed in my mind, her bright smile, her innocence, and the thought sliced through me like a blade, tightening my throat and twisting my stomach until I thought I might be sick. I shoved it down, shoved it all down, because if I let it rise, if I let it settle, I knew I’d break, and I couldn’t—not now. Not yet.

The monitor’s beeps slowed now. His breathing grew more ragged, each exhale sounding like sandpaper scraping against stone.

I leaned in closer, my voice dropping to a whisper, trembling with restrained fury. “You handed him the gun,” I said. “And now you’re leaving me with it.”

His eyes fluttered open one last time. He looked at me, and in that gaze, I saw a mix of sorrow, relief, and something that almost resembled peace. His lips parted slightly, as though he wanted to say something more, but the words never came.

The flatline pierced the room.

I didn’t move. Not right away. The ticking of the clock seemed deafening now, filling the void left by his breath. My father was gone. At peace. But he had left me with the burden of the truth.

The viewing took place at my parents’ house, a sprawling property on an isolated plot in Kilgore, Texas. This was the house Antonio and I grew up in, the ground we stomped on for twenty-something years. The kind of place that still held the echoes of our childhood—our laughter, our fights—but now felt like a mausoleum, cold and unfeeling.

The crowd in attendance was small, just a few family members and a couple of Dad’s old business partners. Some were here out of genuine love, mourning the loss of James Tredway. I could see it in their heavy eyes and the way they lingered near his casket, whispering quiet prayers or sharing soft memories.

Others, though, had a different agenda. They shook hands too firmly, offered condolences that sounded rehearsed, and glanced at their watches as if to remind themselves sealing up business dealings was the real priority. For them, attending my father’s funeral was just due diligence—making sure the money went to the right accounts and contracts stayed intact.

I stood near the back of the room, watching the flow of people as they approached my mother. Those who truly cared about my father hugged her tightly, their words raw with sincerity. The others—those counterfeit mourners—delivered the same hollow spiel they’d tell any grieving widow, their smiles more calculated than comforting. My mother, ever gracious, played her part perfectly, but the lines on her face deepened with every shallow condolence.

My gaze shifted to Sandy. She was sitting alone at the edge of the grand staircase, her posture folded in on itself, her hands clasped loosely in her lap. She looked as she always did—dark attire draped over her thin frame, her long black hair framing her pale face like a curtain. A silver chain dangled from her neck, and her heavy boots tapped lightly against the step as if keeping time with her thoughts.

There was an air of defiance in her stillness, a quiet stubbornness that came naturally to fourteen-year-olds who believed they could carry the weight of the world alone. It wasn’t much different from her usual goth look, but today it felt heavier, quieter, as though even her rebellious armor couldn’t hide her grief.

Sandy loved her grandfather deeply. She was his favorite, and he always found ways to remind her of that. I could still hear the laughter between them echoing faintly in the house. I moved to sit beside her, lowering myself slowly, as if the weight of my thoughts might crack the floor. She didn’t look at me right away, her eyes fixed on something distant, but when I reached for her hand, she finally turned. Her fingers were cool and soft, and when I gave her hand a gentle squeeze, she placed her other palm on top of my forearm, an anchor for both of us.

“You okay?” I asked, my voice quiet, cautious.

She nodded, her lips pressed together in a thin line before she answered, “I think so.”

She didn’t know that I knew. She couldn’t know.

“I’m here,” I said, my voice trembling slightly despite my effort to sound steady. “If you ever want to talk about things.”

She nodded again, her gaze dropping to our hands.

I studied her face—the sharp lines of her eyeliner, the smudged lipstick, the way her eyes seemed so much older than her fourteen years. She had no idea how much I loved her, even after everything. The divorce had strained our relationship, created walls where there used to be bridges, but she was my daughter. My Sandy. And the truth—what my father had told me—was a fire I couldn’t extinguish. I wanted to protect her. I needed to protect her.

She gave my hand one last squeeze before pulling away, retreating back into her silence. I sat beside her a moment longer, feeling the storm rising again, threatening to break.

In the kitchen, my mother stood in the center of a cluster of visitors, her polite smile etched onto a face weary from grief. Their conversation had shifted to playful memories of my father—his big personality, his effortless humor. They spoke of the way he could make anyone laugh, even in the midst of a tense meeting, how he carried himself as both a self-made CEO and a natural comedian. He ran his business with the precision of a surgeon and the charisma of a showman, treating his colleagues and clients like family. My father was the kind of man people called “real,” a man’s man, full of integrity and strength.

Yet here I was, in the house he built, thinking about the secret he’d carried to his grave—a secret that didn’t just challenge his integrity, but obliterated it in my eyes. To know what he had discovered in his final years, to imagine the weight of it on his shoulders, sickened me. My stomach churned as I thought of him grappling with that truth, hiding it, deciding to leave me with the burden. The trust I had in him—the trust of a son who idolized his father—shattered in an instant, splintering into irreparable pieces. Not because of what he did, but because of what he didn’t do.

My mother caught my gaze from across the room, reading me like a book as she always did. She must have seen something—an edge in my expression, a tension in my shoulders. She didn’t say anything, just walked over, gently took my hand, and pulled me into a long, enveloping hug. Her arms were warm, steadying me, the way they always had been. If my father’s firm handshake was a symbol of assurance, her hugs were their opposite—a softness that whispered, You’re safe here.

“He’s Home,” she said softly, her voice trembling with her faith. My father was a man who had always believed in something bigger than himself, a man whose relationship with God was less of a performance and more of a quiet conversation. He prayed often, sought guidance, and lived as though every decision was being measured by something divine. My mother’s words weren’t just comforting—they were a reminder of who he had been at his best.

I nodded and murmured, “He’s Home.”

But even as I said the words, my mind was elsewhere. I glanced around the room, scanning the faces. Something was missing—or rather, someone.

“Where’s Tony?” I asked, my voice sharper than I intended.

“I haven’t seen him since he got here a couple of hours ago,” Mom said, frowning as she looked around, too.

Antonio. My brother. My shadow in childhood. We were inseparable back then, a package deal. If one of us was in trouble, the other was right there too, usually as an accomplice. We stomped through these very halls, breaking furniture, testing boundaries, always side by side. Making Mom nervous. Making Dad laugh.

But something changed when we grew up. I followed my father into the family business, eager to prove myself, while Antonio turned his back on it entirely. He preferred the field—work that didn’t carry the Tredway name. He became distant, retreating into his own world, and by the time we hit our twenties, we were living two entirely separate lives. He was a recluse by nature, content to be alone, while I stayed in the thick of things, always moving forward.

Still, there was something unspoken between us—a connection that couldn’t be broken, no matter how far we drifted. Even now, with everything that had happened, I knew one thing: I always knew how to find Antonio.

And I was going to need to find him now.

My father’s Man Cave was sacred ground—off-limits, even to Mom. But Antonio and I? We’d broken that rule more times than I could count. Late at night, when the house fell silent, we’d sneak in, swipe a bottle of Dad’s liquor, and laugh like idiots as we played bartender.

The room was a shrine to masculinity. Dark leather chairs, polished oak paneling, and a granite bar stocked with high-end whiskey and scotch. A big-screen TV dominated the space, always tuned to sports or news. This was Dad’s retreat—a place for business deals over cigars and bourbon or an escape from Mom’s honey-do lists. It smelled of wood polish, leather, and a faint trace of smoke, like him.

Antonio stood behind the bar, where Dad used to pour drinks for his friends. A glass of Crown on the rocks rested in his hand, the ice clinking softly as he swirled it. He’d grown out of mixing it with Coke years ago, ever since Dad gave him that disapproving look and said, “Don’t ruin a good Crown with that sugary crap.”

I sat across from him, in the same spot I’d taken a hundred times before. Antonio didn’t need to ask me what I wanted. He reached for a bottle, poured me a drink—straight, no nonsense—and slid it across the bar. His movements were smooth, practiced, as if we were just two brothers sharing a quiet moment of nostalgia. For a moment, we were.

“You remember that time we almost got caught up here?” Antonio said, a flicker of a smile breaking the tension.

I smirked. “Which time?”

“The time you brought that girl…Ashley,” he said, chuckling as he took another sip.

“Oh yeah,” I said, shaking my head. “She tried to sneak Dad’s fifty-year Glenlivet into her purse and shattered the bottle on the floor.”

“Mom took the blame for that one,” Antonio said, laughing. “Didn’t talk to Dad for a week.”

The memory brought a brief warmth to the room, but it didn’t last. The laughter faded, and the weight of reality settled back in. My grip tightened around the glass as anger simmered in my chest, thick and bitter.

“Dad told me he gave you his old .357,” I said, my voice steady but sharp.

Antonio’s glass paused mid-air. He set it down slowly, scanning my face with cautious eyes.

“Yeah,” he said, feigning nonchalance. “Can you believe that? Just handed it to me.”

He reached to his side, pulled the revolver from a holster on his hip, and placed it on the bar. The polished steel gleamed under the dim lights, a cold, silent presence between us.

I stared at it for a long moment, then looked up, meeting Antonio’s gaze.

“He told me why he gave it to you, too.”

His expression shifted. The smirk vanished, replaced by something harder, darker. He let out a forced laugh.

“What are you talking about?” he said.

My jaw tightened as I leaned forward, my voice lowering.

“He told me everything, Tony.”

Antonio pushed back slightly, his shoulders stiffening.

“What are you talking about, Matt?” His voice cracked, his words clipped with tension.

I stood slowly, my hands grazing the bar’s edge before stopping just short of the gun.

“He said he was in the basement looking for a two-by-four,” I said, my words deliberate, sharp. “And he walked in on you.”

Antonio’s breath hitched. He froze.

“Matt, it’s not what you think—”

“You were with Sandy,” I said, my voice cutting through his denial. “He told me he caught you with her.”

Antonio’s face drained of color. His hands trembled, his shoulders caving slightly. “Matt,” he stammered, “I wasn’t—I didn’t—”

“What?” I snapped, my voice rising. “You gonna tell me you were reading her a bedtime story?”

His eyes darted to the revolver on the bar, and his body stiffened as if preparing for a fight.

“What…you’re gonna kill me?” he whispered.

I stared at him, unblinking. His eyes—those same eyes I’d wiped tears from when he was a kid, those same eyes I’d seen bloodied and bruised after bullies got to him—those eyes were now foreign to me. They betrayed something I couldn’t unsee, couldn’t forgive.

“No, Tony,” I said, my voice cold. “You’re my brother.”

I picked up the revolver, its weight familiar in my hand. Slowly, deliberately, I placed it back on the bar, adjusting the handle so it was closer to him.

“Do the right thing, Tony,” I said, tapping the bar lightly with my knuckles. “Because the next time I see you, it better be in a newspaper.”

I leaned in close, pressing my forehead to his, my voice dropping to a whisper.

“And I’m not talking about a mugshot.”

I kissed his forehead—a gesture of finality, not forgiveness—and turned toward the door.

My steps were slow, deliberate, my heart pounding with every inch I put between us. I didn’t look back. I couldn’t.

Then I heard it—the unmistakable click of the hammer cocking back.

I froze, my hand hovering near the doorframe. The air in the room shifted, heavy and electric, charged with the weight of it all. My breathing slowed, my pulse thundered in my ears.

The shot rang out, shattering the silence like glass.

I flinched, the deafening blast ricocheting through my skull. The smell of gunpowder filled the room, sharp and acrid, curling in my nostrils. My chest tightened, my pulse raced.

Slowly, I turned around.

Antonio was slumped against the bar, blood pooling on the floor beneath him, the revolver slipping from his hand. Smoke curled from the barrel, twisting into the air like a ghost. The metallic tang of blood mixed with the sharp scent of gunpowder.

I staggered back, my breath caught in my throat. My knees buckled, but I didn’t fall. The room felt too quiet, the kind of quiet that crushed you.

“Tony,” I whispered, my voice cracking, falling into the void.

I stepped closer, one trembling hand reaching out, but the sight of him stopped me. He looked peaceful, almost as if he were sleeping, but the red truth spilling from his temple told me otherwise. My stomach churned, my chest tightening with a bitter mix of grief and fury. He’d escaped, leaving me alone to carry the weight he couldn’t.

My fists curled as the rage bubbled, but it didn’t matter. Nothing I felt mattered now.

Antonio was gone.

And for the first time in my life, I couldn’t follow him.

November 24, 2024 03:26

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