In the summer of 1992, four cousins, ages 9 to 15, vanished without a trace from their family’s isolated farmhouse in rural Vermont during a weekend reunion.

No bodies were ever found.

No ransom was demanded.

The farmhouse stood empty for 31 years, avoided by locals who whispered about cursed ground and buried sins.

But when a developer’s excavation team broke ground on the property in 2023, they unearthed something that would shatter everything investigators thought they knew about that terrible August night.

If you’re drawn to true crime mysteries that refused to let go, make sure to subscribe and follow this investigation to its disturbing conclusion.

The backho’s metal teeth bit into the earth behind the old Wicker farmhouse, churning soil that hadn’t been disturbed in decades.

Dust hung in the morning air as construction foreman Dale Hutchkins watched his crew prepare the foundation for luxury condominiums.

The farmhouse itself would be demolished by weeks end.

Another relic of rural Vermont swallowed by progress.

Hold up, one of the excavator operators called out, raising his hand.

Dale approached the dig site, irritation prickling at the delay.

They were already behind schedule.

What’s the problem? The operator pointed into the freshly turned earth.

Something white protruded from the dark soil, too uniform to be a rock.

Dale’s irritation evaporated as he recognized the curved shape.

He’d seen enough hunting accidents in his 20 years of construction work to know human bone when he saw it.

Within hours, the property swarmed with Vermont State Police.

Crime scene tape cordined off the excavation site while forensic anthropologists carefully extracted what appeared to be multiple sets of skeletal remains from a handdug pit approximately 8 ft deep.

The bones were small children’s bones.

Detective Carla Brennan stood at the edge of the pit watching the painstaking recovery process.

She’d been with Vermont State Police for 15 years, but this case predated her time on the force.

Still, everyone in law enforcement knew about the Wicker Farm disappearances.

Four cousins vanished in a single night.

The case that destroyed careers and haunted a generation of investigators.

We’ve got four distinct individuals, the lead forensic anthropologist reported, climbing up from the pit.

Preliminary assessment suggests ages ranging from prepubescent to mid-adolescent time in ground approximately 30 years give or take.

Carla felt something cold settle in her stomach.

The cousins.

That would be my guess, detective, though.

We’ll need dental records and DNA for positive identification.

Carla turned to survey the farmhouse in the distance.

Its windows were dark and empty, the white paint peeling in long strips.

For 31 years, this house had kept its secrets.

Now, finally, the dead were ready to speak.

But as Carla would soon discover, finding the bodies was only the beginning.

The real horror lay in understanding how four children ended up in that unmarked grave, and why the person responsible had walked free for three decades, hidden in plain sight among the very people who mourned them.

Elena Frost had not returned to Vermont in 23 years.

The moment she crossed the state line, something tightened in her chest, a physical manifestation of memory she’d spent decades trying to bury.

The call from Detective Brennan had come 3 days ago, professional and carefully worded, asking if Elena could come to Vermont to discuss new developments in her nieces and nephews case.

Elena knew what new developments meant.

They’d found the bodies.

She’d been 32 that August in 1992, visiting her sister Diane’s farmhouse for what was supposed to be a joyful family reunion.

Now she was 63.

Her dark hair threaded with silver.

Her face lined with the weight of years spent wondering what had happened to Sophie, Nathan, Olivia, and Marcus, her sister’s children, who had simply ceased to exist.

One summer night, the Vermont State Police barracks sat on the outskirts of Bennington, a utilitarian brick building that looked exactly as Elena remembered from the endless interviews in the weeks following the disappearance.

She parked her rental car and sat for a moment, hands gripping the steering wheel, trying to steady her breathing.

Inside, a young officer directed her to Detective Brennan’s office.

The detective was younger than Ellena expected, perhaps early 40s, with sharp gray eyes and auburn hair pulled back in a practical ponytail.

She rose when Ellena entered, extending her hand.

“Miss Frost, thank you for coming.

I know this must be difficult.

” Elellena shook her hand, noting the firm grip.

You found them? Yes.

Brennan gestured to a chair.

Please sit.

Can I get you coffee? Water? Water would be good.

As Brennan poured from a picture on her desk, Elena studied the corkboard behind her.

Crime scene photographs, maps, timeline notes.

The detective had been thorough.

We discovered the remains 6 days ago during excavation on the property.

Brennan began, handing Ellena the water.

Forensic analysis confirms four individuals, ages and time frame consistent with your nieces and nephews.

We’re waiting on final DNA confirmation, but dental records have already provided positive matches for Sophie and Nathan.

Elena’s hand trembled slightly as she raised the glass to her lips.

She’d known, of course, known for 31 years that those children were dead, that no miracle would return them alive.

But confirmation felt like a door slamming shut on hope she hadn’t realized she was still carrying.

How did they die? Brennan’s expression remained professionally neutral, but Elena caught the flicker of something in her eyes.

Pity or perhaps rage.

The forensic anthropologist identified trauma consistent with blunt force injuries to the skulls.

It would have been quick.

Quick, as if that made it better.

Elena closed her eyes briefly.

You said on the phone you had questions for me.

The original investigation was extensive, but I’ve been reviewing the files, and there are some gaps I’d like to fill in.

Brennan opened a folder.

You were at the farmhouse the night they disappeared.

Can you walk me through that evening again? Elena had told this story dozens of times to a parade of investigators, but she understood why Brennan needed to hear it fresh.

Details had a way of shifting over decades, and sometimes a new set of ears caught something others had missed.

It was August 15th, a Saturday, Elellena began.

My sister Diane and her husband Paul owned the farmhouse.

They’d invited family up for the weekend.

It was supposed to be a celebration, their 15th wedding anniversary.

My brother Thomas came with his two kids, Nathan and Marcus.

I came alone.

I’d just gone through a divorce.

And your sister’s children were Sophie and Olivia, Brennan confirmed, making notes.

Yes.

Sophie was 15, the oldest.

Olivia was 11.

Nathan was 13.

Marcus was nine.

Elellanena’s voice caught slightly on Marcus’s name.

He’d been the youngest, always trying to keep up with the older kids.

They were excited to spend time together.

The cousins didn’t see each other often.

Thomas lived in Connecticut.

I was in New York City.

Tell me about that evening.

What time did everyone arrive? Thomas and the boys got there Friday afternoon.

I arrived Friday evening around 7.

We had dinner together.

The adults stayed up talking.

The kids were upstairs.

Said they were going to watch movies in Sophie’s room.

Elena paused, remembering how normal it had all seemed, how utterly ordinary.

Around 11:00, Diane and I went up to tell them to get ready for bed.

They were all in sleeping bags on Sophie’s floor, still awake, talking and laughing.

That was the last time I saw them.

What time did you go to bed? Midnight, maybe a little after.

Paul and Thomas were still downstairs having drinks.

Diane and I went to our rooms.

I was staying in the guest room at the end of the hall.

And the next morning, this was the part that still haunted Elena’s nightmares.

Diane screamed.

It woke the whole house around 700 in the morning.

She’d gone to wake the kids for breakfast and they were gone.

All four of them.

Sleeping bags empty, window open.

Brennan leaned forward slightly.

The window in Sophie’s room.

Yes.

It looked out over the back of the property.

There was a trellis on that side of the house, sturdy enough to climb down.

We assumed they’d snuck out during the night.

For what purpose? Elena had asked herself this question thousands of times.

We didn’t know.

Maybe to explore the woods or just to have an adventure.

They were kids.

Sophie was old enough to think she was invincible, and the younger ones would have followed her anywhere.

But they never came back.

No.

We searched the property, called their names.

Paul drove around the area, thinking maybe they’d walked to the main road.

After 2 hours, Diane called the police.

Elena’s throat tightened.

The search went on for weeks.

Hundreds of volunteers, search dogs, helicopters.

They dredged the pond on the north side of the property.

Nothing.

It was like they’d been erased from existence.

Brennan studied her notes.

The original investigators focused heavily on the possibility of a stranger abduction.

Was there anyone unfamiliar in the area that weekend? Any unusual vehicles? Not that I saw.

The farmhouse was isolated, 3 mi from the nearest neighbor.

The road didn’t get much traffic.

What about your family? Were there any tensions that weekend? Anything unusual in anyone’s behavior? Elena understood what Brennan was really asking.

“Had anyone in the family been responsible?” “The investigators looked at all of us,” Elena said quietly.

“Paul and Diane, Thomas, me.

We all took polygraphs.

Our movements that night were accounted for.

None of us heard anything unusual, saw anything suspicious.

The prevailing theory was that the children snuck out and encountered someone.

A drifter maybe, or someone who knew the property would be occupied that weekend, someone who just happened to have the means to abduct and kill four children in the middle of the night without anyone hearing a struggle.

The skepticism in Brennan’s voice was clear.

Elena felt a chill run through her.

You don’t think it was a stranger, do you? Brennan set down her pen.

Ms.

Frost.

In my experience, when four children are murdered and buried on their own family’s property, the person responsible is usually someone they knew, someone they trusted enough to go with willingly.

Elena’s mouth went dry.

We were all investigated thoroughly.

I know, and I’m not accusing anyone in your family, but I think someone connected to that farmhouse knew more than they told investigators.

And after 31 years, I intend to find out who.

The Wicker farmhouse looked worse than Elena remembered.

She stood in the gravel driveway, Detective Brennan beside her, studying the deteriorating structure.

Crime scene tape still fluttered around the excavation site behind the house, though the forensic team had finished their work days ago.

Diane sold the property 5 years after the disappearance.

Elena said.

She and Paul couldn’t bear to live here anymore.

It went through several owners, but no one stayed long.

The locals called it cursed.

“Did you believe that?” Brennan asked.

“That the property was cursed.

” “I believe something terrible happened here.

Whether you call that a curse or just evil, I’m not sure the distinction matters.

” Brennan pulled a key from her pocket.

The current owner gave us permission to access the house.

I thought it might help to walk through it together.

See if anything jogs your memory.

The front door opened with a groan of protesting hinges.

Inside, the air was stale and thick with dust.

Furniture sat shrouded in sheets, and the afternoon light filtered weakly through dirty windows.

Elena felt the past rushing back, overwhelming in its intensity.

“The layout hasn’t changed,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper.

“Living room here? kitchen through that doorway.

Stairs to the second floor.

They climbed the creaking stairs.

The hallway upstairs stretched before them, doors closed on either side.

Brennan consulted a handdrawn floor plan from the original investigation file.

Sophie’s room was at the end of the hall on the right.

Yes.

They walked to the door together.

Brennan opened it and Elena stepped inside.

The room was empty now, stripped of Sophie’s posters and books, the cheerful curtains Diane had sewn, but Elena could still see it as it had been.

Four sleeping bags on the floor, her nieces and nephews laughing in the lamplight.

The window, Brennan said, crossing to examine it.

Original investigators confirmed it had been opened from the inside.

No signs of forced entry.

Elena joined her at the window below.

The trellis still clung to the side of the house, though it looked ready to collapse.

Beyond that, the property stretched into dense woods.

If they climbed down, where would they have gone? Brennan wondered aloud.

There was a path through the woods.

Elena said the memory surfacing.

It led to an old stone foundation, the remains of an earlier homestead.

The kids like to play there during the day.

They called it the castle.

Brennan made a note.

The search teams would have checked it.

I’m sure they did, but it was a big property, over 60 acres.

Most of it woulded.

They spent the next hour walking through the rest of the house.

In each room, Elena shared what she remembered from that weekend, the meals they’d eaten, the conversations they’d had, the ordinary moments that had preceded the extraordinary horror.

Brennan listened carefully, occasionally asking questions that probed deeper into details Elena had forgotten she knew.

Back downstairs, Brennan paused in front of an old photograph hanging in the hallway.

Despite the dust coating the glass, Elena could make out the image.

Diane and Paul on their wedding day, young and radiant with hope.

Your sister and her husband, Brennan said.

Where are they now? Paul died eight years ago.

Heart attack.

Diane lives in Florida with her second husband.

She remarried a few years after Paul passed.

“Have you stayed in touch?” Elena hesitated.

“Not really.

” After what happened, the family fractured.

Thomas moved to California, cut off contact with everyone, said he couldn’t bear the reminders.

Diane and I tried for a while, but every conversation circled back to that night to the questions we couldn’t answer.

Eventually, it was easier to just let go.

And you went to New York.

I went back to New York.

Elena corrected.

I’d been living there before.

I just never came back to Vermont.

Brennan turned from the photograph.

Until now.

Until now.

They walked outside, the fresh air a relief after the mustustiness of the house.

Brennan led Elena around to the back where the excavation site gaped like a wound in the earth.

Someone had filled in the pit after the remains were removed, but the disturbed soil was still obvious.

They were buried 8 ft down, Brennan said.

That’s deep.

Required significant effort and time.

Whoever did this knew they’d need to hide the bodies well, and they’d need privacy to accomplish it.

Elena forced herself to look at the site.

Somewhere beneath that soil, her nieces and nephews had lain for 31 years while the world moved on without them.

The original investigation focused on the theory that they were taken away from the property, Elena said.

If they’d known to search here.

They did search here, Brennan said gently.

Dogs, ground penetrating radar, the works.

But GPR technology in 1992 wasn’t what it is now.

And if the grave was dug deep enough with the right soil conditions, it could have been missed.

So they were here all along.

The realization was crushing.

While we searched the woods and highways while Diane printed thousands of missing posters, they were right here.

I’m sorry, Brennan said.

I know that doesn’t make it easier.

Elena wiped at her eyes, angry at the tears.

She’d thought she’d cried all she could for those children years ago.

What happens now? Now we reopen the investigation with the knowledge that this was a homicide, not a disappearance.

We look at everything again with that framework and we start with the people who had access to this property on the night in question.

You mean my family? I mean anyone who was here had reason to be here.

Your family, yes, but also neighbors, workers who might have done jobs on the property, friends of the family.

The original investigation cast a wide net, but some leads were never fully pursued because investigators were chasing the abduction theory.

They walked back toward the front of the house.

Brennan paused before getting into her vehicle.

Miss Frost, I want to ask you something, and I need you to be completely honest with me.

Elena felt her stomach tighten.

All right.

Do you think anyone in your family was capable of killing those children? The question hung in the air between them.

Elena thought about Diane, who had loved her daughters fiercely, about Paul, who had been a devoted father, about Thomas, who had doted on his sons.

About herself, who had viewed those children as the brightest lights in a family that had known its share of darkness? I would have said no, Elena answered slowly.

I would have sworn that none of us could have done something so monstrous.

But But I also would have said it was impossible for four children to vanish without a trace from a house full of adults.

I would have said we’d never find them, that they’d simply ceased to exist.

Elellanena met Brennan’s eyes.

I’ve learned not to deal in absolutes anymore, detective.

I don’t know what anyone is capable of when pushed hard enough.

Brennan nodded, seeming satisfied with this answer.

I’ll be in touch.

We’ll need formal statements from you, your sister, and your brother.

DNA samples as well for comparison to the remains.

Of course, whatever you need.

As Elena drove away from the farmhouse, she watched it shrink in a rear view mirror.

The building looked malevolent in the fading afternoon light, its empty windows like eyes watching her retreat.

She’d come to Vermont thinking that finally knowing what happened to the children would bring some measure of peace.

Instead, she felt like she was being pulled into something darker than she’d imagined.

Because if the children had been killed and buried on the property by someone they knew, then someone in Elena’s family, someone she’d lived with, eaten with, grieved with, was a murderer who had hidden in plain sight for 31 years.

And that person was still out there.

Detective Brennan sat in her office late that evening.

The Wicker case files spread across her desk in organized chaos.

31 years of investigation filled four bankers boxes, thousands of pages of interviews, forensic reports, search logs, and deadend leads.

The original investigators had been thorough.

She’d give them that.

But they’d been operating under a false assumption that the children had been taken from the property.

Now, with the bodies found buried on the farmhouse grounds, everything needed to be re-examined through a different lens.

Her phone buzzed.

A text from the forensic anthropologist.

DNA results expedited.

Should have confirmation by tomorrow afternoon.

Brennan rubbed her eyes.

She’d been at this for 12 hours straight, but something in the original files nagged at her, a detail that didn’t quite fit.

She pulled out the timeline constructed by the initial investigators.

Friday, August 14th, 1992.

4:30 p.

m.

Thomas Frost and sons Nathan, 13, and Marcus, 9.

Arrive at farmhouse.

7:15 p.

m.

Elena Frost arrives.

8:00 p.

m.

Family dinner.

11 p.

m.

Diane Wicker checks on children in Sophie’s room.

All four present and accounted for.

12:15 a.

m.

Adults retire to their rooms.

Saturday, August 15th, 1992 7 a.

m.

Diane Wicker discovers children missing.

7:45 a.

m.

Local police notified.

9:30 a.

m.

State police arrive.

Search begins.

Brennan studied the timeline, then pulled out the individual interview transcripts.

She started with Paul Wicker’s statement given August 16th, 1992.

I went to bed around 12:30.

Diane was already asleep.

I didn’t hear anything unusual during the night.

I’m a heavy sleeper.

Have been my whole life.

The first I knew anything was wrong was when Diane started screaming the next morning.

Thomas Frost’s statement, same date.

The boys and I were in the guest room on the first floor.

I heard Diane upstairs around 11:00, telling the kids to settle down for bed.

After that, nothing.

I slept straight through until the screaming woke me up.

I didn’t hear them leave.

Didn’t hear anything at all.

Elena Frost’s statement.

My room was at the end of the hall, opposite from Sophie’s room.

I’m a light sleeper usually, but I’d taken a sleep aid that night.

I’d been having trouble sleeping since the divorce.

I didn’t wake up until Diane was pounding on my door, hysterical.

And Diane Wicker’s statement taken 3 days later when she was composed enough to be interviewed.

I checked on them at 11:00.

They were fine, happy, excited to be together.

Sophie promised me they’d go to sleep soon.

I trusted her.

She was responsible for her age.

When I went to wake them for breakfast and found the room empty, the window open, I just knew something terrible had happened.

A mother knows.

Brennan made notes in the margins.

Everyone had been accounted for.

Everyone had alibi witnesses.

The family had been investigated exhaustively.

Financials, backgrounds, polygraphs.

No red flags.

The only fingerprints found on Sophie’s window belonged to the children themselves.

She turned to the list of people who had been on or near the property in the weeks before the disappearance.

The original investigators had been meticulous.

Martin Grayson, handyman who’d repaired the farmhouse roof in July.

Rebecca Sutton, neighbor from 3 mi east who occasionally borrowed tools.

Father Dominic Carr, priest from the local Catholic church who’d visited to discuss Paul and Dian’s anniversary blessing.

Dr.

Andrew Voss, Dian’s psychiatrist, who’d made a house call the week before when Diane was too anxious to drive to his office.

That last entry made Brennan pause.

She flipped through the files until she found Diane Wicker’s medical records subpoenaed during the original investigation.

The records showed Diane had been seeing Dr.

Voss for anxiety and depression since 1990, 2 years before the disappearance.

The notes were clinical, discussing medication adjustments and therapy sessions.

But there was a gap.

No appointments logged for the 3 weeks following the disappearance.

Then a notation on September 8th, 1992.

Patient hospitalized following nervous breakdown.

Treatment suspended pending psychiatric evaluation.

Brennan pulled out her phone and called the number listed for Elena Frost.

Detective.

Elena’s voice sounded tired.

I’m sorry to call so late.

I have a question about your sister.

The records show she was hospitalized after the children disappeared.

A long pause.

Yes.

About 3 weeks after she stopped eating, stopped sleeping, started having hallucinations.

What kind of hallucinations? She said she could hear the children calling for her from the woods.

She’d run out in the middle of the night trying to find them.

Paul would have to physically restrain her.

Finally, her doctor recommended inpatient treatment.

How long was she hospitalized? 6 months.

When she came home, she was different, quieter, more fragile.

She and Paul tried to rebuild their lives, but the house was too full of ghosts.

That’s when they decided to sell.

Brennan made notes.

And your brother Thomas, how did he cope? Thomas threw himself into work.

He was an architect.

Spent 18-hour days at the office.

He barely spoke to any of us.

At the funeral, we held a memorial service.

Even though we didn’t have bodies, he sat in the back and left before it was over.

That was the last time I saw him in person.

Have you talked to him since I contacted you about the discovery? I tried calling.

He didn’t answer.

I left a message telling him they’d found the children.

He hasn’t called back.

After ending the call, Brennan typed Thomas Frost’s name into the law enforcement database.

His last known address was in Sacramento, California.

She made a note to contact Sacramento PD for a welfare check.

The desk phone rang, startling her.

It was nearly 11 at night, unusual for office calls.

Detective Brennan.

Detective, this is Officer Morrison from patrol.

We’ve got a situation at the old Wicker farmhouse.

Silent alarm was triggered about 20 minutes ago.

Brennan grabbed her jacket.

I’m on my way.

The drive to the farmhouse took 30 minutes.

When Brennan arrived, two patrol cars were already there.

Light bars painting the property and alternating red and blue.

Officer Morrison met her in the driveway.

Alarm company called it in.

We’ve cleared the exterior, but the front door standing open.

Looks like someone jimmied the lock.

Brennan drew her weapon and followed Morrison into the house.

They cleared the first floor methodically, finding nothing disturbed.

Upstairs, the hallway stretched before them, ominous in the beam of their flashlights.

Sophie’s room door stood open.

Inside, Brennan swept her light across the empty space and froze.

Someone had spray painted a message on the far wall in large, uneven letters.

They knew too much.

Below the message, four child-sized handprints had been made in what looked like red paint.

Brennan stepped closer, her pulse quickening.

not paint.

The consistency was wrong and the metallic smell was unmistakable.

Blood.

Morrison called for backup while Brennan photographed the scene.

Fresh blood, which meant whoever had done this had been here recently.

She studied the handprints carefully.

They looked deliberately placed, almost ritualistic in their arrangement.

Detective Morrison called from the hallway.

You need to see this.

In the hallway, a trail of bloody footprints led from Sophie’s room to the stairs.

Adult-sized distinct tread pattern.

Whoever had left the message had walked out the front door.

Brennan followed the trail outside.

The footprints continued across the gravel driveway, then disappeared into the grass.

She played her flashlight across the property, but the darkness beyond was impenetrable.

Someone had been watching the farmhouse.

Someone who knew about the discovery of the bodies.

Someone who wanted to send a message.

They knew too much.

But what had four children known that was worth killing them for? And why, after 31 years, was someone trying to scare investigators away from finding out? Elena woke to her phone ringing at 2:00 in the morning.

Detective Brennan’s name glowed on the screen.

Someone broke into the farmhouse tonight, Brennan said without preamble.

Left a message.

I think you should see it.

20 minutes later, Elena stood in Sophie’s old room, staring at the words on the wall.

The blood had dried to a rust brown color, the handprints looking disturbingly small against the faded wallpaper.

“Whose blood?” she asked, her voice steady despite the horror churning in her stomach.

We won’t know until the lab analyzes it.

But the prints are child-sized.

Brennan gestured to the message.

Does this mean anything to you? They knew too much.

Elena shook her head slowly.

I don’t understand.

They were children.

What could they have known? That’s what we need to figure out.

Brennan led her back downstairs, away from the gruesome scene.

I need to ask you something.

Is there any possibility the children witnessed something before they disappeared? Something that might have made them a threat to someone? Like what? I don’t know.

A crime, an affair, abuse, anything that would give someone a motive to silence them.

Elena sank into one of the sheetcovered chairs in the living room, dust puffing around her.

She tried to think back to that weekend, to the conversations she’d had with the children.

Sophie had been acting strange that summer, Elena said slowly, the memory surfacing.

Diane mentioned it when I arrived Friday night.

Said Sophie had been withdrawn, secretive.

She’d assumed it was just teenage moodiness.

Did you talk to Sophie about it? briefly Saturday afternoon before dinner.

I asked if everything was okay at school, if she wanted to talk about anything.

She said she was fine, just tired.

Elena paused, but she looked scared.

I thought maybe it was boy trouble or something equally teenage.

I didn’t push.

Brennan made notes.

What about the other children, Nathan, Marcus, Olivia? They seemed normal.

Excited about the reunion, happy to see each other, Nathan and Marcus were obsessed with some video game they’d brought, Olivia followed Sophie around like a shadow.

She idolized her older cousin.

So, if Sophie knew something, it’s possible she might have told the others.

Maybe they were close, all four of them.

They video called regularly, wrote letters.

Elena looked up sharply.

The letters.

Sophie kept a box of them in her room.

Did the police find it? Brennan flipped through her notes.

There’s no mention of letters in the evidence log.

They existed.

I helped Sophie organized them once the summer before.

She kept them in a blue shoe box under her bed.

Within minutes, Brennan had officers searching Sophie’s room.

They found nothing under the bed but dust.

The closet yielded only empty hangers.

Whoever had cleaned out the room after the wickers moved had been thorough.

“Could your sister have kept them?” Brennan asked.

“I can call her.

” Diane answered on the fourth ring, her voice thick with sleep and medication.

“Ellena, it’s the middle of the night.

” “I know, Dye.

I’m sorry, but I’m at the farmhouse with the police.

They found the children, Diane.

They found Sophie and Olivia.

” Silence on the other end, then a sharp intake of breath.

Where? Buried on the property behind the house.

Elena felt tears stinging her eyes.

Detective Brennan is reopening the investigation.

We need to find Sophie’s letters.

The ones she kept in the blue shoe box.

Do you have them? Letters? Dian’s voice sounded distant, confused.

I don’t remember any letters.

The box she kept under her bed.

Letters from Nathan and Marcus.

From her friends at school.

You must have packed it when you moved.

I didn’t pack Sophie’s room.

The words came out flat.

Dead.

I couldn’t go in there.

Paul did it.

He packed everything.

Donated most of it.

I couldn’t bear to see her things.

Elena felt something cold grip her heart.

What did Paul do with the donations? I don’t know.

Goodwill maybe or the church.

Father Carr organized a charity drive that fall earlier and moved to a nursing home in Burlington.

The church records from 1992 had been digitized, but donation inventories weren’t detailed enough to track individual items.

It’s a dead end, Brennan said, frustration clear in her voice.

But Elellanena was thinking about something else.

Paul packed Sophie’s room.

He would have seen the letters, read them, maybe.

So, so maybe he found something in them.

Something that made him realize what the children knew.

Elellanena met Brennan’s eyes.

You said whoever buried those children needed privacy and time.

Paul lived here.

He knew every inch of this property.

Brennan’s expression shifted.

Paul Wicker was investigated thoroughly.

He passed a polygraph.

Polygraphs can be beaten.

And everyone said Paul was the most broken up about the disappearance.

Maybe that was guilt, not grief.

Miss Frost, I understand you’re looking for answers, but Paul Wicker died 8 years ago.

Even if he was responsible, we can’t question him or charge him, but we can search his belongings.

Diane might have kept things from his estate.

Elena called her sister back.

This conversation was harder, asking Diane if her first husband might have murdered their children.

Diane’s response was immediate and fierce.

Absolutely not.

Paul had loved those girls.

He’d spent every day for the rest of his life mourning them.

But yes, Diane still had boxes of Paul’s things in her garage in Florida.

She’d never been able to sort through them.

The memories were too painful.

I can have Florida police execute a search warrant, Brennan said after Elena relayed this.

But it’ll take time.

I’ll go.

Elena said, I’ll fly to Florida tomorrow, talk to Diane, go through Paul’s things myself.

This is an active investigation, Miss Frost.

I can’t have civilians.

Those were my nieces, detective.

My nephews.

I’ve waited 31 years for answers.

I’m not waiting anymore.

Brennan studied her for a long moment, then nodded slowly.

I’ll come with you.

If there’s evidence in Paul Wicker’s belongings, it needs to be properly documented and preserved for prosecution.

Prosecution of who? Paul’s dead, maybe.

But if Paul was involved, he might not have acted alone.

And whoever broke into this house tonight and left that message is very much alive.

They left the farmhouse as dawn began to break.

The crime scene unit still processing the bloody handprints.

Elena looked back at the building one last time as they drove away.

In the growing light, it looked almost peaceful, a relic of rural Vermont that would soon be demolished to make way for luxury condos.

But Elena knew better now.

The farmhouse had been a tomb for 31 years, keeping its terrible secrets, and she was beginning to suspect that the truth, when it finally emerged, would be more horrifying than anyone had imagined, because the message on the wall suggested something chilling.

The children hadn’t simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time.

They’d been murdered to keep them quiet about something they discovered.

and whoever had wanted them silenced was still out there, still protecting whatever dark secret had cost four children their lives.

The flight to Tampa took 3 hours.

Elena spent most of it staring out the window, watching clouds drift past while her mind churned through possibilities she’d never allowed herself to consider.

Detective Brennan worked beside her, reviewing files on her laptop, occasionally making notes.

Diane’s house sat in a gated retirement community, a modest ranchstyle home with palm trees in the front yard.

When Diane answered the door, Elena barely recognized her sister.

The vibrant woman she remembered had been replaced by someone fragile and diminished, her hair completely white, her frame stooped.

“Elena,” Diane whispered.

And then she was crying, decades of grief pouring out in wrecking sobs.

Elena held her sister while Brennan waited respectfully at a distance.

When Diane finally composed herself, she led them inside to a living room decorated with generic coastal art.

There were no family photographs visible.

No momentos from her life in Vermont.

I can’t keep pictures, Diane explained, following Elellena’s gaze.

Richard, my husband.

He understands.

The memories are too painful.

Where is Richard? Brennan asked gently.

Golf.

He tries to give me space when I’m having difficult days.

I called him after Elena’s call last night.

Told him about Sophie and Olivia being found.

Dian’s voice cracked.

31 years and I still can’t say it without breaking.

Brennan sat across from her.

Mrs.

Wicker, I know this is incredibly difficult, but we need to search Paul’s belongings.

Your sister mentioned you kept boxes from his estate in the garage.

I couldn’t throw them away, but I couldn’t look at them either.

Diane stood shakily.

I’ll show you.

The garage had been converted into storage space.

Boxes were stacked along one wall, neatly labeled in Paul’s precise handwriting.

Tax records 1985 to 1990.

Medical files.

Business documents.

Diane pointed to a stack near the back.

Those are his personal things.

Clothes, books, his workshop tools.

I kept meaning to donate them, but we’ll need to go through everything.

Brennan said.

Is that all right? Diane nodded and retreated back into the house.

Elena heard the television turn on, volume loud enough to drown out thought.

They worked methodically, Brennan photographing each box before they opened it, documenting everything.

Most contained exactly what the labels indicated, mundane artifacts of a life lived.

Paul’s medical files showed treatment for high blood pressure and mild diabetes.

His business documents related to his accounting practice.

Then Elena opened a box labeled simply personal.

Inside were photo albums, greeting cards, a jewelry box containing Paul’s wedding ring and watch.

Beneath those items, wrapped in a flannel shirt, was a leatherbound journal.

“Detective,” Elena said quietly.

Brennan came to her side as Elena opened the journal.

The first entry was dated August 20th, 1992, 5 days after the children disappeared.

I can’t sleep.

Every time I close my eyes, I see their faces.

Sophie’s room is exactly as she left it.

I can’t bring myself to disturb anything.

Diane is falling apart.

The police keep asking the same questions, looking at me with suspicion in their eyes.

They think I know something.

God help me.

Maybe I do.

Elena turned the page with trembling fingers.

August 27th, 1992.

Found Sophie’s letters today.

Had to pack a room finally.

Diane couldn’t do it.

She was supposed to donate everything to Father Carr’s charity drive.

But I couldn’t let these go.

I read them all.

Every single one.

Nathan’s letters were innocent, talking about school and video games.

But there was one from Sophie to Nathan dated two weeks before the reunion.

She never sent it.

Must have changed her mind.

In it, she wrote about seeing something at the church.

She’d gone with Diane to help prepare for our anniversary blessing.

Father Carr was in his office with Dr.

Voss.

The door was cracked.

Sophie wrote that she heard them arguing about money, about keeping secrets, about how no one could ever know.

She said Dr.

Voss saw her listening and smiled at her in a way that scared her.

I showed the letter to Thomas.

He said I should take it to the police immediately, but I couldn’t.

Dr.

Voss has been treating Diane for years.

He’s helped her so much with her anxiety, and Father Carr married us, baptized our daughters.

These are good men.

Sophie must have misunderstood what she heard.

Thomas called me a coward.

Said I was protecting them instead of finding justice for the children.

Maybe he’s right.

But the police have been investigating for 2 weeks and found nothing.

A letter about an overheard conversation isn’t going to change that.

Brennan was already on her phone calling Vermont State Police to request immediate background checks on Father Dominic Carr and Dr.

Andrew Voss.

Elena continued reading.

September 10th, 1992.

Diane is in the hospital.

I visit everyday, but she doesn’t recognize me half the time.

Dr.

Voss recommended the facility.

He’s been so supportive through all of this.

I feel guilty for ever suspecting him of anything.

Burned Sophie’s unscent letter today.

I couldn’t risk anyone finding it.

If I was wrong about Dr.

Voss and Father Carr.

I could destroy two innocent men’s reputations.

If I was right, I don’t know what to think anymore.

The police have found nothing.

Maybe the children really did encounter a stranger that night.

Thomas won’t speak to me.

He thinks I’m complicit in our children’s deaths.

Maybe I am.

The next entry was dated 6 months later.

February 1993.

We’re selling the farmhouse.

I can’t live here anymore.

Every room is haunted.

Sometimes late at night, I think I hear digging sounds from behind the house.

But when I go outside, there’s nothing.

Just my guilt manifesting as sound.

Dr.

Voss says I need to forgive myself.

That there was nothing I could have done.

I want to believe him.

God, how I want to believe him.

The journal entries became sporadic after that, mostly recording Paul’s deteriorating mental state and his efforts to rebuild a life with Diane.

The final entry was dated 3 weeks before his death.

I dream about Sophie every night now.

She’s trying to tell me something, but I can’t hear her.

Maybe that’s my punishment to spend eternity knowing I failed her.

Failed all of them.

If there’s a hell, I’ve been living in it for 16 years.

Death will be a relief.

Elena closed the journal, her hands shaking.

He knew Paul knew what Sophie had discovered, and he destroyed the evidence.

Brennan was still on the phone, but she’d gone pale.

When she ended the call, she turned to Elellanena with an expression Elellanena couldn’t quite read.

Father Dominic Carr retired from the church in 1995, 3 years after the disappearance, moved to Burlington, lived quietly in a nursing home until his death last year.

Brennan paused.

Dr.

Andrew Voss also retired in 1995.

Sold his practice, moved to Maine.

He’s still alive, living in a small coastal town.

No criminal record for either man.

That doesn’t mean they’re innocent.

No, it doesn’t.

Brennan’s jaw tightened.

But here’s what’s interesting.

When Father Carr retired, there were rumors.

Nothing official, but the dascese moved him very quietly.

some questions about financial irregularities and Voss clean record, but I just got off the phone with a retired detective who worked the original investigation.

He remembers Paul Wicker mentioning Dr.

Voss several times, said Paul seemed almost defensive of him, insisted Voss couldn’t be involved.

Elena felt sick because Paul knew what Sophie had discovered and chose to protect Voss instead of pursuing justice.

They returned to the living room where Diane sat watching television with unseeing eyes.

Elena knelt in front of her sister, taking her hands.

Dye, I need you to focus.

This is important.

Dr.

Voss, did he ever do anything that made you uncomfortable? Anything that seemed off? Diane’s brow furrowed.

Andrew, no, he was wonderful.

He helped me through the worst time of my life.

Did he ever visit the farmhouse before the children disappeared? Of course, he made house calls when my anxiety was too bad for me to drive to his office.

Paul appreciated that.

Said Andrew went above and beyond for his patience.

How many times did he visit? Diane thought for a moment.

Maybe four or five times over two years.

The last visit was about a week before the reunion.

Elena and Brennan exchanged glances.

Dr.

Andrew Voss had been at the farmhouse a week before four children disappeared.

He’d had opportunity to familiarize himself with the layout, the property, the hiding places, and according to Paul’s journal, Sophie had overheard something that scared her.

Something involving Dr.

Voss and Father Carr.

“We need to talk to Voss,” Elena said.

Brennan nodded.

“I’ll coordinate with Main State Police.

We’ll need to be careful.

If he’s been free for 31 years, he’s smart.

We can’t spook him before we have enough for an arrest warrant.

As they prepared to leave, Diane called out to Elellena.

The children, can I see them? Can I bury my daughters properly now? Elellanena felt tears burning her eyes.

Soon, Dy, I promise.

But first, we need to find out who did this to them.

We need to make sure they get justice.

Justice won’t bring them back.

No, but it’s all we have left to give them.

On the flight back to Vermont, Elena stared at the photocopy Brennan had made of Paul’s journal entry.

Four children had died because they’d overheard something.

And Paul Wicker, in his misguided attempt to protect men he considered friends, had destroyed the evidence that might have saved them.

The question that haunted Elena was simple and terrible.

Had the children already been dead when Paul found Sophie’s letter, or had his decision to stay silent sealed their fate? Dr.

Andrew Voss lived in a weathered cottage overlooking the main coastline about 40 mi north of Portland.

Detective Brennan had coordinated with local law enforcement, and two main state police detectives accompanied them to the residence on a gray afternoon 3 days after their return from Florida.

Elena waited in Brennan’s vehicle while the detectives approached the front door.

She’d been asked to stay back.

Her presence might complicate the interview, but Brennan had agreed to let her listen through an earpiece connected to the wire Brennan wore.

Through the earpiece, Elena heard the knock, then footsteps, then a door opening.

Dr.

Voss, Brennan’s voice.

I’m Detective Carla Brennan with Vermont State Police.

These are detectives Morrison and Chen from Maine State Police.

We’d like to ask you some questions about the Wicker family.

A pause, then a man’s voice, cultured and calm.

The Wicker family? I haven’t heard that name in many years.

Please come in.

Elena strained to hear every word.

The sound of footsteps, doors closing, the creek of furniture as people sat down.

You were Diane Wicker’s psychiatrist in the early 1990s.

Brennan said it wasn’t a question.

I was terrible tragedy.

What happened to her children? I treated Diane for years afterward.

The trauma nearly destroyed her.

You made house calls to the Wicker farmhouse.

Occasionally, yes.

When Diane’s anxiety prevented her from traveling to my office, it was part of my commitment to comprehensive patient care.

Do you remember visiting the farmhouse in early August 1992, about a week before the children disappeared? Another pause.

Longer this time.

That was over 30 years ago, detective.

I’d have to check my records to be certain of specific dates.

But you do remember visiting around that time, I believe.

So, yes.

Diane had been experiencing increased anxiety about her anniversary party.

She wanted everything to be perfect.

Brennan’s voice took on an edge.

While you were there, did you have any interaction with Dian’s daughter, Sophie? The older girl possibly.

I may have said hello in passing.

Why are you asking about this now? We found the children, Dr.

Voss, buried on the wicker property.

This is now a homicide investigation.

The silence that followed was heavy.

When Voss finally spoke, his voice had changed, become more guarded.

I see.

That’s horrific, but I don’t understand what it has to do with me.

Sophie Wicker wrote a letter before she died.

In it, she described overhearing a conversation between you and Father Dominic Carr.

An argument about money and secrets.

Do you remember having such a conversation with Father Carr? I knew Father Carr professionally.

We occasionally discussed parish matters.

But an argument about secrets? That sounds like the imagination of a teenage girl.

Detective Sophie seemed frightened by what she heard.

Specifically frightened of you.

That’s absurd.

I’ve devoted my life to helping people, especially children.

I would never harm a child.

Elena heard Brennan shuffle papers.

Can you tell me about your financial situation in 1992, Dr.

Voss? What does that have to do with anything? Just answer the question, please.

I had a successful practice.

I was comfortable.

According to records we’ve obtained, you filed for bankruptcy in 1991.

Your practice was failing.

By summer of 1992, you were deeply in debt.

Brennan’s voice was relentless.

Then, mysteriously, in October 1992, 2 months after the children disappeared, you made a cash deposit of $50,000 into your savings account.

Where did that money come from? Voss’s breathing had become audible through the wire.

I had investments.

They matured.

We’ve reviewed your financial records, Dr.

Voss.

There were no investments.

The money appeared from nowhere.

I want a lawyer.

That’s your right.

But let me tell you what I think happened.

I think Sophie Wicker overheard something she shouldn’t have.

Maybe she told the other children.

Maybe the four of them together posed a threat to you.

So that night while the adults were sleeping, you came back to the farmhouse.

You knew the layout from your house calls.

You knew which room was Sophie’s.

You convinced the children to leave with you.

They trusted you because you were their mother’s doctor.

And then you killed them to protect whatever secret they discovered.

This is insane.

I want you to leave.

Now, we’re not leaving, Dr.

Voss.

We have a warrant to search this property and I think we’re going to find evidence linking you to those children’s murders.

Elena heard sudden movement.

Something crashing.

Brennan’s voice shouted, “He’s running.

Back door.

” The sounds that followed were chaotic.

Running footsteps.

Shouts.

The crash of waves.

Elena jumped out of the vehicle despite instructions to stay put.

Running toward the cottage.

Maine State Police detectives were already pouring around the building.

She found them at the edge of a cliff overlooking the ocean.

Dr.

Andrew Voss stood at the precipice, his silver hair whipping in the wind.

Brennan and the other detectives had their weapons drawn.

“Don’t come any closer,” Voss called out.

His composure had shattered, revealing something desperate and cornered underneath.

“Dr.

Voss, step away from the edge,” Brennan ordered.

You don’t understand.

It wasn’t supposed to happen like that.

None of it was supposed to happen.

Elellena pushed past the police line before anyone could stop her.

Tell me what my nieces and nephews knew.

Tell me why you killed them.

Voss’s eyes found hers and she saw recognition there.

You’re the aunt.

Elena.

Diane talked about you in our sessions.

Tell me the truth.

You owe them that much.

Voss laughed.

a broken sound that the wind carried away.

The truth.

The truth is that Sophie was too curious for her own good.

She heard Father Carr and me discussing our arrangement.

Father Carr had been embezzling from the dascese for years.

I helped him hide the money, launder it through fake patient accounts.

In exchange, he paid me.

It kept my practice afloat.

And Sophie threatened to expose you.

She didn’t even know what she’d heard.

But Father Carr panicked, said we had to do something before she told her parents.

I told him we couldn’t hurt a child.

I’m a doctor for God’s sake.

I took an oath.

Voss’s face contorted.

But Father Carr said if we didn’t act, we’d both go to prison.

He said he had a plan.

What plan? The night of the reunion, he waited in the woods behind the farmhouse.

I told him about the trellis outside Sophie’s window during one of my house calls.

Mentioned it as a safety concern to Diane.

Father Carr climbed up and knocked on the window.

Told the children he needed their help, that someone was hurt in the woods.

They trusted him.

He was their priest.

Elena felt bile rising in her throat.

And then he brought them to a clearing.

I was supposed to be there to talk to Sophie to convince her she’d misunderstood.

But when I arrived, Voss’s voice broke.

He’d already killed them.

All four, said it had to be done, that they’d all heard too much.

He made it look like a quick accident.

Told me I was complicit now, that we had to bury them and never speak of it.

You could have stopped him.

You could have called the police.

And say what? That I’d stood by while a priest murdered four children.

I was already guilty.

The moment I agreed to meet Father Carr that night, I sealed their fate.

The money in October, Brennan said that was your payment for helping cover it up.

Father Carr gave me 50,000 to keep quiet.

Said it was insurance that we were both guilty now.

We’d both hang if the truth came out.

He was right.

Father Carr is dead.

Elena said he can’t pay for what he did.

But you can.

You can tell us where he buried the evidence.

What else he did? You can give those children justice.

Voss shook his head.

Justice? I destroyed evidence, paid for silence, lied to investigators.

I’ve lived with their faces in my nightmares for 31 years.

There’s no justice for what we did.

Then at least give us the truth.

All of it.

The truth is that Father Carr died comfortable and peaceful in a nursing home surrounded by people who thought he was a saint.

The truth is that I’ve been free for three decades while four innocent children rotted in an unmarked grave.

The truth is that Paul Wicker found Sophie’s letter and chose to protect us instead of his own daughter.

Voss looked at Elellanena with hollow eyes.

The truth is that everyone failed those children and nothing.

No confession, no punishment will ever change that.

Before anyone could react, Voss stepped backward off the cliff.

Elena screamed, lunging forward, but Brennan caught her, held her back.

They watched Voss’s body fall, tumbling through the air before disappearing into the churning waves below.

“Get rescue teams down there,” Brennan ordered into her radio.

But her voice said what everyone knew.

From that height into those rocks, there would be nothing to rescue.

Elena sank to her knees.

Brennan still holding her.

31 years of questions, and the man who could have answered them all had just chosen death over accountability.

But at least now they knew the truth.

Father Dominic Carr had murdered four children to protect an embezzlement scheme, and Dr.

Andrew Voss had helped him cover it up.

Paul Wicker had found evidence and destroyed it, choosing to protect the men he trusted over justice for his daughter.

The only question that remained was who had broken into the farmhouse and left that message in blood.

Because Voss had seemed genuinely surprised by the investigation, and Father Carr was dead.

Someone else knew what had happened that night, someone who wanted to make sure the truth stayed buried.

The search for Dr.

Voss’s body took 3 days.

When the Coast Guard finally recovered it from the rocks, Detective Brennan was already back in Vermont following a lead that had emerged from Voss’s confession.

Elena sat in Brennan’s office, exhausted from grief and travel when the detective burst in with a file folder.

Thomas Frost never returned to California after the disappearance, Brennan said without preamble.

I had Sacramento PD do a welfare check at his last known address.

The current residents have lived there for 20 years.

They bought the house from an estate sale after the previous owner, a software developer named Marcus Chen, died.

No one named Thomas Frost has ever lived at that address.

Elena felt her stomach drop.

That’s impossible.

I sent letters there.

He had that address on his business cards.

The address exists, but Thomas was never there.

Brennan spread documents across her desk.

I went back through the original investigation files.

Thomas Frost gave an alibi for the night of the disappearance.

Said he was in the guest room with his sons, but no one actually verified he stayed there all night.

Paul was drunk, asleep by 1:00 a.

m.

You’d taken a sleeping pill.

Diane was in her own room.

Thomas wouldn’t hurt his own children.

Maybe not intentionally.

But what if he knew what they discovered? What if Father Carr or Dr.

Voss approached him, convinced him the children needed to be silenced.

Elena shook her head violently.

No.

Thomas loved Nathan and Marcus.

He was devastated when they disappeared.

Was he or was he guilty? Brennan pulled out another document.

After Paul Wicker died 8 years ago, someone made an anonymous donation to the local Vermont Historical Society, $50,000.

The donation was earmarked specifically for maintaining the cemetery where Paul was buried.

I don’t understand.

The donation came from a bank in Oregon.

I traced it back through multiple shell companies and guess whose name appeared on the original account.

Brennan paused.

Thomas Frost.

Elena felt the room spinning.

Why would Thomas pay to maintain Paul’s grave? Because Paul knew.

Paul found Sophie’s letter and destroyed it.

But he must have told Thomas what it said.

Thomas knew that Father Carr and Dr.

Voss were responsible.

And instead of going to the police, he took payment to keep quiet.

That’s insane, is it? Think about it.

Thomas was an architect, but his firm was failing in 1992.

Then suddenly, after the children disappeared, he sold his business for a substantial profit and moved across the country.

Started a new life with a new identity.

Brennan pulled out more documents.

I’ve been digging into Thomas’s finances.

Between 1992 and 2023, he made regular deposits into offshore accounts.

The amounts vary, but they total over $2 million.

That’s a lot of money for someone who supposedly lived a quiet life as a software developer.

You think he was being paid by Father Carr and Voss? I think Father Carr and Voss paid him to help dispose of the bodies and then keep quiet about it.

And I think Thomas has been living off that blood money for 31 years.

Elena felt sick.

Her brother, her own brother, had helped murder his children and cover it up for money.

There’s more, Brennan said quietly.

The blood at the farmhouse, the lab results came back.

The handprints weren’t made with fresh blood.

It was old blood preserved somehow and the DNA matches Nathan Frost.

Elena’s vision grade at the edges.

Nathan’s blood.

But how? Father Carr or Voss must have kept samples.

Maybe as insurance, maybe as trophies.

And someone who had access to those samples left that message.

Brennan leaned forward.

Elena, where is your brother right now? I don’t know.

I told you he hasn’t returned my calls.

When was the last time you actually spoke to him? In person or on the phone? Elena thought back, trying to remember.

Years, maybe 10 years.

We exchanged Christmas cards, but he never included a return address.

Just signed them.

Thomas and family.

What family? Thomas never remarried after his wife died in 1995.

The room seemed to tilt.

His wife died.

Car accident 2 years after the disappearance.

After that, Thomas disappeared from public record.

No credit cards, no property ownership, no tax returns.

It’s like he became a ghost.

Brennan’s phone rang.

She answered, listened for a moment, then her expression hardened.

We’re on our way.

She stood, grabbing her jacket.

That was the officer watching the farmhouse.

Someone just broke in again.

and this time they brought company.

The drive to the farmhouse took 25 minutes.

When they arrived, three patrol cars were already there, but no officers were visible.

Brennan drew her weapon, motioning for Elena to stay in the vehicle, but Elena couldn’t stay.

Not anymore.

She followed Brennan into the farmhouse, her heart pounding.

The house was silent.

Too silent.

They cleared the first floor, then climbed the stairs.

At the end of the hallway, Sophie’s door stood open.

Inside, a man stood with his back to them, staring at the message on the wall.

He was thin, his hair completely gray, wearing clothes that hung loose on his frame.

When he turned, Elena gasped.

“Thomas,” her brother looked decades older than his 63 years.

His face was gaunt, his eyes sunken and haunted.

He held something in his hands, a photograph of his sons.

“I came back,” Thomas said, his voice barely a whisper.

“I had to come back,” Brendan kept her weapon trained on him.

“Thomas Frost, I need you to put down whatever you’re holding and put your hands where I can see them.

” Thomas looked at the photograph, then gently set it on the floor.

“I don’t have a weapon, detective.

I’m not here to hurt anyone.

I’m here to confess.

Confess to what? Brennan asked.

To watching my children die and doing nothing to stop it.

Elena felt her legs buckle.

She sank against the door frame while Thomas began to speak.

Father Carr came to me two weeks before the reunion.

Said Sophie had overheard something dangerous.

Asked if I could convince her to forget about it.

Said it was just a misunderstanding.

I believed him.

He was a priest, a man of God.

Why wouldn’t I believe him? Thomas’s voice cracked.

The night of the disappearance, Father Carr called the guest room phone around midnight.

Said he needed to talk to me urgently, asked me to meet him in the woods behind the house.

I went, I thought maybe he wanted to discuss how to approach Sophie.

When I got there, Dr.

Voss was with him and they had the children.

You knew? Elena whispered.

You were there when they killed them.

I tried to stop it.

God help me.

I tried.

But Father Carr had a gun.

He said if I interfered, he’d kill me, too.

And then he’d go back to the house and kill you, Diane Paul.

Everyone, he said the children had to die because they knew too much.

That it was them or all of us.

Thomas’s face contorted with anguish.

I watched him shoot Nathan first.

My boy, my 13-year-old boy.

He looked at me as he died.

looked at me like I was supposed to save him.

Then Marcus, then Sophie, then little Olivia, and I just stood there.

I stood there and did nothing.

Why didn’t you go to the police afterward? Brennan demanded.

Because I was a coward.

Father Carr and Voss said they’d tell everyone I helped kill the children, that I’d led them into the woods.

Who would believe me over a priest and a doctor? I was terrified, so I took their money and I ran.

The message on the wall, Brennan said, “That was you?” Thomas nodded.

When I heard they’d found the bodies, I knew it was over.

I came back to leave a warning, to tell the truth in the only way I could, but I used Nathan’s blood.

Blood Father Carr had kept.

Blood he gave me years ago as a reminder of what would happen if I ever talked.

I’ve kept it all this time, frozen, a reminder of my sin.

He looked at Elellanena with hollow eyes.

I’ve been dead for 31 years, walking and breathing, but dead inside.

Every day I see their faces.

Every night I hear Nathan asking why I didn’t save him.

“Where have you been all these years?” Elena asked, her voice breaking.

“Nowhere, everywhere.

moving from town to town, never staying long enough for anyone to know me.

The money Father Carr gave me was supposed to buy my silence.

Instead, it bought my hell.

Brennan lowered her weapon slightly.

Thomas Frost, you’re under arrest for accessory to murder and obstruction of justice.

I know.

I’m ready.

I’ve been ready for 31 years.

Thomas held out his wrists.

I should have died with them that night.

should have fought harder, died trying to protect them.

Instead, I chose to live with this, and I’ve paid for that choice every single day since.

” As Brennan handcuffed him, Thomas looked at Ellena one last time.

“I’m sorry.

I know it doesn’t mean anything, but I’m so sorry.

I failed them.

I failed you.

I failed everyone.

” Elena couldn’t speak.

couldn’t process that her brother, the man she’d mourned alongside, had watched his own children be murdered and done nothing, had taken blood money and disappeared rather than seek justice.

As officers led Thomas away, Elena sank to the floor of Sophie’s room, surrounded by the ghosts of four children who had trusted the adults in their lives to protect them.

Every single adult had failed them.

And that was the most horrifying truth of all.

Six months later, Elena stood in the small cemetery outside Bennington where Sophie, Nathan, Olivia, and Marcus were finally laid to rest.

The funeral had been private.

Just Elena, Diane, and a handful of close family friends who still remembered the children.

Thomas Frost sat in a Vermont prison awaiting trial.

His confession had been detailed and devastating, corroborating everything Dr.

Voss had revealed before his death.

The embezzlement scheme, the panic when Sophie overheard, the terrible calculation that four children’s lives were worth less than two men’s freedom.

Father Dominic Carr’s reputation had been postumously destroyed.

The dascese had opened investigations into his entire tenure, uncovering decades of financial crimes and abuse of power.

His name had been stripped from the parish buildings he’d helped construct.

Dr.

Andrew Voss’s body had been buried without ceremony.

His family had issued a brief statement expressing shock and horror at his crimes, then disappeared from public view.

Paul Wicker’s journal had been entered into evidence.

His complicity in destroying evidence documented for history.

Diane had wept when she learned what her husband had done.

The man she’d mourned for years revealed to be complicit in their daughter’s deaths.

But today wasn’t about the criminals.

Today was about the children.

Elena approached the four small headstones, each engraved with a name and the dates that bracketed such brief lives.

She placed flowers on each grave.

Sophie’s favorite sunflowers.

Red roses for Olivia, who had loved Beauty and the Beast.

Blue irises for Nathan, who had collected marbles that color.

Yellow daisies for little Marcus, who had been sunshine personified.

I’m so sorry, Elena whispered to the stones.

We should have protected you.

All of us should have done better.

Diane joined her, leaning heavily on her cane.

Her health had deteriorated rapidly since learning the truth.

The final betrayals too much for her fragile mind to bear.

“Do you think they can forgive us?” Diane asked quietly.

Elena didn’t know how to answer.

How could anyone forgive such catastrophic failure? Four children had died because the adults in their lives had chosen money, reputation, and self-preservation over doing what was right.

“I think they know we loved them,” Elena said finally.

“I think they know we never stopped looking.

never stopped hoping, even when we should have known better.

Thomas loved them, too, Diane said.

And he still chose to save himself.

It was true.

Love hadn’t been enough.

Not Paul’s love, not Thomas’s, not even the love of the mothers who had birthed those children.

In the end, fear and greed had proven stronger.

As the sun began to set, Elena and Diane walked back to their car.

Behind them, the four small graves stood in a row, finally marked, finally acknowledged.

No longer hidden in an unmarked pit behind a farmhouse, but given the dignity of a proper burial.

It wasn’t justice.

Nothing could truly be justice for what had been stolen from those children.

But it was something.

That night, Elena returned to the hotel room she’d been staying in for the past 6 months.

She’d extended her leave from work indefinitely, unable to return to her life in New York while the investigation continued.

Tomorrow, she would fly to Florida to help Diane settle into an assisted living facility.

After that, she didn’t know.

Her old life felt impossible to return to, but she couldn’t imagine what a new life might look like.

Her phone rang.

Detective Brennan.

I thought you should know, Brennan said.

We finished searching Father Carr’s effects from the nursing home.

Found a safe deposit box key hidden in a Bible.

The box contained journals documenting everything.

The embezzlement, the murders, his justifications for what he’d done.

He kept detailed records of every payment made to Thomas, every threat used to keep him silent.

Why would he document his own crimes? Insurance maybe, or arrogance.

Some criminals can’t resist keeping trophies, proving how clever they are.

Brennan paused.

There was also a letter addressed to whoever finds this.

Want to know what it said? Tell me.

It said, “God forgives all sins.

These children died so that his work could continue.

Their sacrifice, though tragic, served a greater purpose.

History will absolve me.

” Elena felt rage surge through her.

He actually believed that some people can justify anything to themselves.

Father Carr convinced himself that his embezzlement was funding God’s work, so the children’s deaths were acceptable collateral damage.

Brennan’s voice hardened.

He died believing he’d done nothing wrong.

That’s the part that haunts me most.

After hanging up, Elena stood at the window, looking out at the Vermont night.

Somewhere in this state, four children had laughed and played and dreamed of futures they’d never reach.

They’d trusted the adults around them to keep them safe.

And every single adult had failed.

But at least now their story was known.

The truth, however horrible, had emerged from three decades of darkness.

Sophie, Nathan, Olivia, and Marcus were no longer just missing children on faded posters.

They were murder victims whose killers had been exposed, whose deaths had been acknowledged, whose short lives had been mourned.

It wasn’t enough.

It would never be enough.

But it was all Elena had to give them.

She touched the window glass, feeling the cold seep through.

“Sleep well,” she whispered to the four children.

She would never stop mourning.

“You’re safe now.

Finally, you’re safe.

” Outside, the stars emerged one by one in the darkening sky, silent witnesses to both the horror of the past and the fragile hope of remembrance.

The farmhouse would be demolished next month, the land scraped clean and transformed into luxury condominiums for people who would never know what evil had transpired there.

But the cemetery would remain.

The four small headstones would stand as permanent reminders that Sophie, Nathan, Olivia, and Marcus Wicker Frost had existed, had mattered, had been loved, and that their deaths, though unavvenged in the fullest sense, had not been forgotten.

In the end, memory was the only justice the dead could claim, and Elellanena would make sure they were remembered