The wife was here. She left in the last day, maybe less, probably to stay with family while she waits for news about a husband who isn't coming home. Nobody else has been through this house since Lawrence died. Whatever he kept here is still here.
I move through the ground floor quickly, cataloging as I go. The house has the layered weight of a family that stopped redecorating decades ago and never needed to start again: oil portraits in heavy frames, oriental rugs worn soft in the traffic patterns, silver on the sideboard tarnished just enough to prove nobody polishes it for show. A dining room holds a table set for two, one place undisturbed, one chair pulled out and left as if the occupant stood up mid-meal and never came back. The living room is formal and unused. The den at the back of the house is where the living actually happens, filled with worn leather chairs, a television, and bookshelves heavy with hardcovers.
Lawrence's study is on the second floor. I find it by following the layout logic that Garden District homes share, the private rooms upstairs and the public rooms below. The study door is closed but unlocked, and behind it sits a room that tells me everything the ground floor didn't.
The desk is orderly. Everything is squared and aligned, pens in a leather cup, a brass letter opener placed parallel to the blotter's edge. The organization reads like personality rather than concealment, the habits of a man who kept his world in precise rows because precision was the only control he trusted. A credenza behind the desk holds file folders in hanging brackets, and the third folder from the back is labeled with a date rather than a subject.
Inside the folder are six photographs, high-quality prints on glossy paper produced by a professional-grade printer. Each photograph shows a different scene in what is unmistakably Dominion. I recognize the club before I recognize anythingelse: the original custom wallcovering Margot replaced when she rebuilt the rooms after the security breach, the distinctive sconce fixtures that cast warm amber in every private space, the Dominion crest embossed on the leather headboards that I've glimpsed through open doors a hundred times while restocking the hallway bar cart. These are the private rooms where members scene with the expectation of absolute confidentiality.
In three of the photographs, Lawrence Blanchard is visible. The scenes are intimate, explicit, the content that a retired Garden District patriarch with a wife and a reputation and decades of careful discretion would do almost anything to keep private.
The remaining photographs show other members in the same rooms, different people in different scenes but captured from the same camera angles. The consistency is what stops me cold. These weren't taken by someone standing in the room with a phone. The framing is identical across multiple rooms on what are clearly different nights, the same elevated perspective looking down, as steady and patient as a mounted camera that never blinks.
Fixed cameras in Dominion's private rooms are not a new problem. The same threat nearly destroyed the club during the Simone LaCroix situation. Luc swept those rooms himself and removed every camera he found. Margot redesigned the security protocols from the ground floor up. The breach was sealed.
The footage it produced wasn't.
Those cameras had been recording for weeks before Luc found them. Every member who scened in those rooms during that window was captured, documented, stored. Luc destroyed the hardware, but whoever planted it could have copied the footage long before the sweep. Lawrence's photographs look like they were taken from the same elevated angles, the same rooms, the same fixed positions. The blackmailer doesn't need camerasinside Dominion anymore. The damage was already done. The footage is a vault that keeps paying out, and Lawrence was just one of the accounts.
The photographs in my hands are blackmail, and blackmail is what got Lawrence killed.
I set the folder on the desk and go through the rest of the credenza. Behind the photograph folder is a second folder, thinner, containing three printed emails. The sender addresses are gibberish, random strings of letters and numbers at domains I've never heard of, addresses built to be used once and thrown away. The messages are brief and identical in structure: a demand for money, a deadline, and the implicit threat that the photographs would be sent to specific people if the demand wasn't met. The amounts escalate. The first is manageable. The second is painful. The third is a number that makes you consider alternatives.
Lawrence paid the first two. Wire transfer confirmations are paper-clipped to the corresponding emails. The third demand has no payment receipt attached. Instead, in the margin, Lawrence wrote three words in the careful handwriting of a man who learned penmanship at a school that no longer exists:Going to police.
He never made it. The murder in the parking garage happened the same week as the deadline on the third demand. Lawrence Blanchard decided to stop paying and tell the authorities, and that decision killed him.
I put everything back exactly as I found it, matching the position of the folders in the credenza, the alignment of the desk items. My hands move with the precision of old practice, and the care I take with the restoration is reflexive and thorough. The nitrile gloves have done their job. I touched as few surfaces as possible: the door, the credenza, the folders, and nothing else.
Andy's face arrives in my head while I'm straightening the last folder, uninvited, vivid, those blue-grey eyes doing the thing they do where they hold still and let me run out of places to hide.
This is what he needs. This is the evidence that turns his phantom case into something real, that gives him the proof his captain demanded, that keeps Lawrence from becoming a file at the bottom of a pile. I can't give it to him. Giving it to him means explaining how I got it, and that explanation puts me in a room with a detective who already suspects I'm hiding something, facing questions I have no legal right to answer without a lawyer and no personal desire to answer at all.
'When you're ready to close that gap, you know where to find me.'His voice plays back low and certain, except the gap is a felony now, and the man on the other side of it carries a badge, and closing the distance means showing him what my hands can do when I stop pretending they only know how to pour drinks.
I lock the back door behind me with the pick and the wrench. The gate latches silently. I cross the side yard, take the sidewalk, and walk several blocks to the car.
The MINI Cooper's door closes around me and I sit in the driver's seat with both hands on the wheel and I don't start the engine.
My hands are shaking.
This shaking is different from what came after witnessing Lawrence's murder. That was fear, adrenaline, the body's response to mortal danger.
This shaking starts in my fingers and travels up my forearms and it comes with a heat in my chest that I haven't felt in three years, the warm, rushing satisfaction of a job done well. The entry was clean. The exit was clean. I read that house the same as I once read every house I ever entered, and my body responded with the fluid competence of a musician returning to an instrument after a long absence.
The high of it sits in my bloodstream and it terrifies me more than the man with the gun.
I told Margot I was done. I shook her hand and I walked off that porch and I promised myself that the woman who broke into houses was dead, buried under years of honest work and earned trust and a debt repaid in full. Margot believed me. She invested in that belief. She built a place for me inside something she cared about, and the price of admission was one simple thing: stop being the person you used to be.
Thirty minutes ago, I picked a lock and moved through a stranger's house with the comfort of someone walking through her own kitchen.
I didn't hesitate. I didn't struggle. The skills are alive and sharp, living in my fingers the way drink recipes live in them, embedded so deeply that forgetting would require removing the muscle itself.
Margot would understand why I did it. She would look at the evidence I found and she would see the threat to Dominion and she would calculate the value of the intelligence against the risk of the method. Margot is pragmatic. Margot invested in me because she saw raw material, and raw material is only useful if it does what it's designed to do.
But understanding why is not the same as forgiving how. I promised her. Not in a contract or a legal agreement, but in the silence of my own chest on a Garden District porch, gripping a pair of folded gloves and knowing that the handshake I'd just given was the most honest thing I'd ever done. That promise is the foundation of everything I've built since. The job, the apartment, the life that makes sense for the first time since my mother died. All of it rests on the understanding that I am no longer the woman in the gloves.
Except I just proved that I am.