For the first time in six years…
The truth had a voice.
The execution was officially stayed.
Not justice.
Not yet.
But time.
Time my mother had almost run out of.
I fell to my knees in front of her.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered. “I should have believed you.”
She touched my face gently.
“You were a child,” she said.
But I knew that wasn’t the whole truth.
I had chosen silence.
Because silence was easier than questioning everything.
The case reopened.
The investigation unraveled faster than anyone expected.
Evidence had been mishandled.
Witness statements ignored.
Victor had been the primary beneficiary of my father’s death—and no one had looked closely enough.
Because the simpler story had been more convenient:
Wife kills husband.
Case closed.
Months later, my mother walked free.
Not dramatically.
No music.
No celebration.
Just a judge reading a decision that should have been made six years earlier.
“Conviction overturned.”
“Immediate release.”
She didn’t move at first.
Like freedom was something her body had forgotten how to accept.
Then the cuffs came off.
And she broke.
Not loudly.
Just… quietly.
Like someone finally allowed to breathe again.
We didn’t go back to the house right away.