The day started like any other. Tuesday. 7:15 a.m. The coffee maker was gurgling its last breath, the morning news was a low, anxious hum in the background, and the faint, damp smell of wet October leaves drifted through the crack in the kitchen window. It was aggressively, painfully normal.
I was loading the dishwasher, sorting spoons from forks, my mind already on a 10 a.m. conference call, when I heard the front door creak open and slam shut with a sound that was too soft. Too hesitant.
“Hey, bud,” I called out, not looking up. “Rough day? Did you forget your lunch again?”
Silence.
The only sound was the drip of the faucet and the clatter of a fork I’d just dropped.
I turned.
My son, Evan, didn’t answer right away. He just stood there in the hallway, a small, seven-year-old statue of dread. He was pale as chalk, his bright blue backpack hanging from one shoulder like it weighed a thousand pounds. His little fingers were trembling, clenched around the zipper toggle, his knuckles white.
“Evan? What’s wrong?”
He looked over his shoulder, a quick, terrified glance back at the closed door, like the walls themselves might be listening. Then, his eyes locked on mine, wide and swimming with a fear I’d never seen in him.
“Daddy,” he whispered, the word barely audible. “Teacher said I should never, ever tell you this.”
That sentence froze me in place. My heart, which had been beating a steady, boring rhythm, gave one hard, painful thump.
“Tell me what, buddy? Did someone hurt you? Are you in trouble?”
He shook his head, his bottom lip trembling. He reached into the front pocket of his backpack, his hand fumbling.
“She said it was Mommy’s secret.”
And he pulled something out.
It was small, metallic, glinting dully in the low light of the hallway. He held it out on his shaking palm like it might burn him.
A small, silver ring.
I knew it instantly. I would know it in the dark, in a fire, at the bottom of the ocean.
The engraving I’d paid extra for, the one I’d traced with my thumb the day before I proposed: M & L, Forever.
My wife’s wedding ring.
My wife, Lauren. The one she said she’d lost last year. The one she’d “lost” on our anniversary trip to Cannon Beach.
I remembered that night. Her standing on the balcony of the hotel room, “crying.” Her frantic searching. “It must have slipped off when I was at the beach,” she’d sobbed. I’d held her, told her it was just a thing, that we were what mattered. I’d spent hours the next morning combing the wet sand with a borrowed metal detector, feeling like a fool.
She’d been so convincing.
My throat locked. The air in my lungs turned to cement.
“Where,” I said, my voice a dry croak, “did you get this?”
Evan flinched at my tone. “In Mommy’s closet. At the back. In the shoe box.”
I walked past him. I don’t remember my feet touching the stairs, but suddenly I was on the second-floor landing. My heart was hammering so loud it felt like footsteps following me up.
Our bedroom door was half-open. The smell of her perfume—jasmine and something sweet—hung faint and floral in the air. It was a smell I used to associate with comfort, with home. Now, it smelled soft, deceitful, and sickeningly familiar.
I opened the closet.
It was ordinary at first glance. Her life, perfectly organized. Neat rows of dresses, the faint shimmer of her heels on the rack, a jewelry box on the shelf. The same jewelry box where the missing ring should have been all along.
But Evan said a shoe box.
I knelt. At the very back, behind her winter boots, under a stack of folded sweaters, I saw it. Something metallic glinted.
A small, locked metal box. The kind you keep cash or… other things in. The kind of thing that doesn’t belong in a house where everyone is supposed to trust each other.
I carried it to the bed, my hands numb. I didn’t have a key. I went to the garage, grabbed a screwdriver, and pried the weak lock open with a single, ugly crack of metal.
Inside was a bundle of old photos, tied with a ribbon. A few folded letters. And one clear plastic bag.
A police evidence bag.
My hands shook so violently I could barely pick it up.
The smell hit first—faint, but unmistakable. Iron and rot. The metallic tang of old blood and the dry, dusty scent of decay.
Inside the bag was something small, curved, and pale.
It was a bone.
I don’t remember dialing 911, but somehow my hand was holding my phone, and the calm, steady voice of a dispatcher was in my ear.
“Sir, you found a what? Sir, please stay calm. What is your address? Officers are on their way.”
Minutes later, two patrol cars and an unmarked sedan pulled into the driveway, lights flashing but sirens off.
A detective in his fifties, with sharp, tired eyes and a voice like gravel, introduced himself as Harlan. He walked upstairs with me, his presence sucking all the air out of the room.
He looked through the box quietly, his gloved hands steady and practiced. He examined the letters, the photos, and then paused when he picked up the evidence bag. He held it up to the light, looked at me, then exchanged a long, silent look with one of the uniformed officers.
“Where’s your wife right now, Mr. Bennett?” he asked, his voice deliberately casual.
“At work,” I said automatically. “She teaches at the high school.”
He nodded slowly. “We’re going to take this in for analysis. The box and its contents. We’ll be in touch.”
They left. They took the box. And I sat on the edge of the bed, staring at that closet door, open now like a wound that wouldn’t stop bleeding.
An hour later, my wife called.
“Hey, honey!” Her voice was bright, musical, rehearsed. “I just got a weird text from Susan next door. She said cops were at the house? What’s going on? Is Evan okay?”
I didn’t answer. I couldn’t. My throat was full of glass.
“Mark?” she said, the brightness faltering for just a second. “Is everything okay?”
“You need to come home.”
When she walked in that evening, she was all smiles, but her eyes were darting around the living room, scanning for… something. Her hands shook just slightly as she set her purse down on the kitchen counter.
“So weird,” she said, forcing a laugh. “What did they want? Was it about that break-in down the street?”
She didn’t ask why they were here. She didn’t ask if they’d found something.
She asked what they found.
That was the moment I knew. The moment the woman I loved evaporated, replaced by the stranger standing in my kitchen. Whatever this was, it wasn’t new. And it wasn’t over.
The next three nights, I didn’t sleep. I’d watch her sleep next to me, her breathing even, her face peaceful. A monster. I’d lie there, rigid, replaying everything. The lost ring. The “stress” from her job. The arguments we’d buried under date nights and forced laughter. Every memory was now contaminated, a lie built on a lie.
On the fourth day, Detective Harlan called. He sounded different this time—more careful, more grim.
“Mr. Bennett, the lab found traces of blood on the fabric inside the box. It’s female. We’re waiting on DNA results, but the bone fragment… it’s human. Part of a knuckle.”
My wife acted calm when I told her the police were still investigating “a cold case” they’d found a lead on. She even smiled, packing our son’s lunch—a perfect, loving mother—like she hadn’t just been linked to a bag of blood and bone.
Every time I looked at her, she looked at the floor. It was like living with a ghost wearing my wife’s face.
That night, when her breathing deepened into sleep, I went searching again. Her new phone was locked with a passcode I didn’t know. But I knew where she kept the old one—tucked in the bottom drawer of her vanity, wrapped in a silk scarf, like a trophy.
It still turned on.
Emails, text messages, photos. All backed up. All sent to an address I didn’t recognize.
The messages were short, frantic. Mentions of the boy. Dates that didn’t line up. And photos. Photos of a child—maybe six, maybe seven—with eyes too much like my son’s. Same dimple. Same smile.
My stomach turned cold. This wasn’t just a secret. This was a whole other life.
One message, buried in her drafts, stopped me dead:
I buried what I had to. He’ll never find out. I made sure.
I sat on the cold bathroom floor and printed everything. No shouting, no accusations. Just evidence. That’s the difference between suspicion and truth. Suspicion burns. Truth freezes.
Two days later, Harlan called again. His voice was flat. “The DNA matched a missing person,” he said. “Three years ago. A woman named Anna Carter. She was your wife’s colleague at the high school.”
The name hit like a punch. Anna. I’d met her. At the staff Christmas party. She’d been sharp, funny. Lauren had complained about her, said she was “nosy.”
I opened the folder of printed emails. There it was — Anna. He keeps asking about Anna. Anna knows too much.
I didn’t wait for the detective to finish. I hung up and sat there in the silence, listening to the faint hum of the refrigerator.
By the time she came home, I had the folder on the kitchen table.
She froze the moment she saw it. Her smile faltered, melted from her face. “What’s this?” she whispered.
“Evidence,” I said.
She flipped through the papers, her eyes widening. The photos of the other child. The emails. The name Anna. Her face crumpled, and she started to cry. But they weren’t tears of remorse. They were tears of an animal caught in a trap.
“You—” I said, my voice shaking with a cold I’d never felt. “You left the truth right next to your shoes.”
“It wasn’t supposed to happen,” she said, choking on the words. “She found out about us. About him.”
I felt something in me go still, go dead. “Him? Not me. Him? Who is he?”
She broke. She collapsed into the chair, sobbing, gasping. “My student. He was seventeen. I didn’t mean for it to happen. It just… it did. But Anna—she saw us. She threatened to expose me. To ruin me.”
The world tilted.
“So you killed her,” I said quietly. It wasn’t a question.
“I didn’t!” she cried. “I didn’t mean to! She came to the house that night, while you were at that conference. She said she’d go to the police. I just… I just wanted her to stop talking. I just wanted her to leave. I pushed her. I didn’t mean—”
“You buried her,” I said. “And you kept her ring.”
Her silence said the rest.
I called Detective Harlan. I told him everything. He told me to keep her there, to stay calm, that they were coming.
When I hung up, she was still crying. “Please,” she whispered. “Don’t let them take our son.”
“You should’ve thought about him before you did this,” I said.
She crawled toward me, clutching my arm, her nails digging in. “I can fix it. I can fix this. We can say—”
I pulled away. “You can’t fix what you buried.”
When the sirens arrived, their blue and red lights painting the walls of our living room, she screamed my name. She begged me to lie for her, to tell them I’d done it, to say anything.
I didn’t move.
They handcuffed her, the chain of her cuffs clinking against the wedding ring that still hung from a chain around her neck — the same one she’d “lost” a year ago. The same one our son had found.
After they took her away, the house was silent. No perfume. No lies. Just me and my son.
He sleeps in my bed now, afraid of her closet. I leave the door wide open. It’s empty.
Sometimes he asks when Mommy’s coming home. I tell him the truth: “Not for a long time.”
The detective called last week. “She confessed,” he said. “Full confession. She buried Anna in the woods behind the school. Said she did it for love.”
I thanked him, hung up, and sat in the quiet house, listening to the wind move through the trees outside.
Love doesn’t bury bodies. Love doesn’t wear gloves when it touches you.
I walked upstairs and stood in front of that empty closet. For the first time, the silence didn’t scare me. Because you don’t really lose people when they die. You lose them when you see who they really are.
The morning after her arrest, the house didn’t feel haunted. It felt vacant. Too quiet, like the air itself was holding its breath.
The police tape across our bedroom door glowed faint, sickly yellow in the early sunlight. I stood in the hallway staring at it, coffee going cold in my hand. My son, Evan, was still asleep in my bed, curled under the blanket like he could hide from the world if he just stayed small enough.
Downstairs, the refrigerator hummed. The sound was maddeningly normal. I wondered how a house could look exactly the same the day after your life fell apart. How the sun could still rise.
At 9:15 a.m., Detective Harlan knocked on the door. He wasn’t in uniform. He looked tired, the kind of tired that comes from seeing too many people find out the worst about the ones they love.
“Mr. Bennett,” he said, his gravelly voice soft. “I wanted to update you in person.”
We sat at the kitchen table, the same table where she’d confessed the night before. “The lab confirmed the DNA from the box matches Anna Carter,” he said. “We found the rest of her remains buried behind the school, just off the hiking trail. Just like she said.”
My jaw clenched. “So it’s over?”
He shook his head, his gaze unwavering. “It’s never really over, Mark. But she confessed. It’ll go to trial in a few months, but it’s a solid case.”
I nodded, numb. “What happens now?”
“Now?” He sighed. “You focus on your son. You change your locks. And you don’t talk to her. Not directly, not through anyone else. Let us handle everything.”
When he left, I sat there for a long time staring at the ring on the table. Her ring. The one she’d lied about losing, the one our son had carried home like a curse.
I picked it up, turned it in my fingers. M & L, Forever. I walked to the sink and finally dropped it into the garbage disposal. The metal screamed when I flipped the switch.
That night, I dreamed of her hands. Digging in the dark, wet dirt. Fingers muddy and trembling. Eyes wild and wet with tears. When I woke, my chest hurt like I’d been running for miles.
Evan was standing in the doorway in his pajamas, clutching his stuffed dinosaur. “Daddy,” he whispered, “are the police gonna take Mommy away forever?”
I pulled him into my arms, his small body trembling. “They’re gonna make sure she can’t hurt anyone anymore.”
He nodded, small and serious. “She said she was helping.”
The words made my stomach twist. “When did she say that?”
“Before bed,” he said softly. “When she told me about the box. She said secrets are how families stay together.”
The next few weeks were a blur of muted colors and muffled sounds. Reporters camped outside for days, their cameras flashing like strobe lights. Neighbors left casseroles on the porch with pitying notes and pretended not to stare when I got the mail. My voicemail filled with messages from people who didn’t know what to say.
I learned how to pack school lunches that didn’t fall apart. I learned how to braid hair from a YouTube tutorial because Evan’s teacher decided the class should make Mother’s Day cards early, “for practice.” I told her to skip him. She said, “Maybe it’ll help him process.” She didn’t understand.
What do you draw for a mother who buried someone behind a school?
Two months later, the prosecutor called. They’d built their case on the confession, the DNA from the box, and the messages I’d given them. But they still needed me to testify.
I said yes before he finished the sentence.
On the day of the preliminary hearing, I left Evan with my sister and drove to the courthouse alone. The sky was gray and heavy, the kind that made everything look like a photograph.
When they brought her in, my breath caught. She looked smaller, thinner, her hair tied back, no makeup. But her eyes — those familiar green eyes — still carried that calm calculation that used to make me think she was simply confident. Now I knew better. It wasn’t confidence. It was control.
Her lawyer spoke first, arguing for leniency. “She was under profound emotional duress,” he said, his voice smooth. “The relationship with the student was a terrible lapse of judgment. The altercation with Ms. Carter was a tragic accident.”
An accident. They said it like she’d dropped a glass of water.
When it was my turn, I stood at the witness stand, my hands gripping the wooden rail. I told the truth in a voice that didn’t sound like mine. How Evan had found the ring. How I’d found the box. How she’d said the words, I can fix it.
The courtroom was silent except for the scratch of the stenographer’s pen.
Her lawyer tried to shake me. “You can’t prove she killed Anna Carter, can you? You didn’t see it.”
“She confessed,” I said. “To you? An angry husband? In the heat of the moment?” “Yes.” “Any chance you misheard? That you wanted to hear it?” “No.”
He leaned closer. “You loved her once, didn’t you, Mr. Bennett?”
I met his eyes. “I thought I did. But love doesn’t bury people.”
Afterward, I saw her in the hallway as the deputies escorted her back to the holding area. She stopped, turned to me, her face pale with rage. She whispered, just loud enough for me to hear. “You ruined everything.”
I almost laughed. Everything had been ruined long before that.
For a while, I thought that was the end of it. But grief doesn’t obey verdicts.
At night, I’d wake up convinced I could hear the closet door creak. Sometimes I’d find Evan sleeping on the floor outside my bedroom, his blanket dragged behind him.
“Dreams?” I’d ask. He’d nod. “Mommy was digging again.”
By August, the trial date was set. The prosecutor warned me it could take months before sentencing. Her lawyer changed strategy — from denial to insanity. Said she’d “lost control,” that her emotional instability “erased her sense of right and wrong.”
I wanted to scream. She hadn’t lost control. She’d hidden it behind a smile and packed it in a box.
One afternoon, Detective Harlan called. “There’s something you should know,” he said. “We checked the emails again — the ones about the boy. The student.”
“What about them?”
“Yes. There were drafts never sent. She kept them on her old phone.” He hesitated. “They talk about wanting to start over. New names, new city. She planned to take your son with her.”
For a second, I couldn’t breathe. She’d already been building a second life before the first one was even over. She was going to steal my son.
“Thank you,” I said quietly. “I needed to know.”
Evan started therapy that fall. His counselor asked him to draw his family. He drew two stick figures — me and him — standing in front of a house. In the corner of the yard, a small gray circle buried under the dirt.
When the counselor asked what it was, he said, “That’s where Mommy hides her secrets.”
The trial was shorter than anyone expected. The jury deliberated just four hours before finding her guilty of second-degree murder, obstruction of justice, and abuse of a corpse. The judge sentenced her to twenty-five years to life.
She didn’t look at me as they led her away. But as she passed, she whispered something to the bailiff — something I couldn’t hear.
I didn’t ask. I didn’t want to.
Months later, when the news finally stopped calling and the casseroles stopped arriving, I realized I had no idea how to live a life that wasn’t built around waiting for disaster.
So I started small.
I took Evan camping for the first time. We roasted marshmallows and watched the stars through the tent flap. He asked if the police caught all the bad guys now. I said, “Most of them.” He asked, “What happens to the rest?” I said, “They run out of places to hide.”
He nodded like he understood more than I wished he did.
One night, a letter arrived from the correctional facility in Salem. No return name, but I knew the handwriting. I almost threw it away. Instead, I opened it.
It was short.
I still love you. Tell Evan I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s left of me anymore.
I didn’t write back. But I didn’t throw it away either. I folded it neatly, sealed it in an envelope, and placed it in the same closet where the box had once been. Then I closed the door — and locked it.
The years blurred after that. Evan grew taller, older. The nightmares came less often. Sometimes I caught flashes of her in him — the tilt of his head, the way he fidgeted with his hands when nervous. I’d remind myself he wasn’t her. He was what was left when the lies were gone.
One winter morning, he found me staring out the window. “Do you still miss her?” he asked.
I thought about it for a long time. “I miss who I thought she was,” I said. He nodded. “Me too.”
The detective retired a few years later. He sent me one final message:
They finally found Anna Carter’s family. They buried her last week. Thought you’d want to know.
I stood in the backyard for a long time that evening, looking toward the woods beyond the fence. The same woods where everything ended. The wind moved through the trees, whispering like something finally laid to rest.
Sometimes, when I tell people what happened, they ask what it felt like to live with someone like her. I tell them the truth.
It felt ordinary — until it didn’t. It felt like love, then loyalty, then fear. It felt like realizing one day that the person you shared a bed with could hide death behind your shoes.
You don’t see monsters coming. You see them unpacking groceries. You see them kissing your child goodnight. You see them “lose” a wedding ring.
And when they finally show you who they are, it’s not a scream. It’s a whisper in the dark that says, You should have looked sooner.
Five years have passed. Time doesn’t heal everything; it just teaches you how to live with what’s left.
The house feels smaller now. Evan’s thirteen, all knees and elbows, his voice cracking between boy and almost-man. The smell of jasmine is long gone, replaced with the sharp scent of teenage boy and sneakers left by the door. He doesn’t remember every detail from that time, but the silence around it shaped him anyway.
There are new routines now. Cereal bowls left in the sink. Shoes kicked off in the hallway. A half-finished, 2000-piece jigsaw puzzle of the Eiffel Tower on the dining table.
Normal life, or close enough to pass for it.
Every Sunday, we drive out to the edge of town to a small diner that serves pancakes as big as plates. Evan always orders the same thing — chocolate chip with extra syrup — and I always pretend not to care about the sugar overload. It’s our ritual. A quiet truce with the world.
One morning, he slid a folded flyer across the table. “Career day next month,” he said, not looking at me. “They want parents to come talk about their jobs.”
I froze. The words parents and come talk pressed like stones in my chest.
He saw my face and said quickly, “It’s fine. You don’t have to. It’s stupid.”
I forced a smile. “Maybe I could talk about architecture. That might be cool, right? Boring, but cool?”
He shrugged, poking at his pancakes. “It’s just weird when people ask about Mom.”
There it was again — the ghost between us. Always sitting at the table, always hungry.
That night, I found him in his room sketching something in a notebook. A house. Simple lines, but precise. He had her hand for art.
“Looks good,” I said, leaning on the doorframe. “You thinking about design?”
He nodded. “Maybe. Houses make sense. You can see where everything’s supposed to go. No surprises.”
I thought about closets. Locked boxes. Places where truth hides. “Yeah,” I said quietly. “It’s good when things have places.”
Two weeks later, I got a call from Detective Harlan — retired now, but still sharp as ever. “Bennett,” he said. “You got a minute?”
“Always.”
He sighed. “They’re closing out old case files at the lab. Your wife’s case came up again. There’s something you should see.”
He met me at a small office above a coffee shop downtown, papers spread out like ghosts waiting to be noticed. He slid one toward me — a photograph of a silver necklace, tarnished and bent.
“Found in the same woods last month during a cleanup crew,” he said. “We think it belonged to Anna Carter.”
I frowned. “I thought they recovered everything.”
“So did we. But here’s the thing—” He pointed to a small, almost illegible tag attached to the chain: Property of L. Bennett.
My stomach turned. “My wife’s?”
“Yeah. Looks like she dropped it at the site. Confirms everything she said in the confession.”
I stared at the photo until the edges blurred. Closure wasn’t supposed to hurt this much. It wasn’t closure. It was just more dirt.
That night, Evan found me sitting on the porch staring into the dark. He sat beside me without saying anything.
After a while, he asked, “Was Mom bad the whole time?”
The question hit like a stone in the ribs. “No,” I said finally. “I don’t think so. She did bad things. Unforgivable things. But she wasn’t all bad.”
He frowned. “What’s the difference?”
I thought about it. “The difference is… monsters don’t start as monsters. They start as people who think they can control everything. People who are more afraid of being seen than they are of doing wrong. Then they make one choice too many.”
He nodded slowly. “Like pretending?”
“Exactly.”
He was quiet for a while, then said, “Sometimes I still dream about her digging.”
I swallowed hard. “Dreams fade when you stop feeding them, kid.”
He looked at me with his mother’s eyes — sharp, searching. “Then maybe we should stop talking about her.”
But that’s the thing. You can stop speaking someone’s name, but you can’t stop them from echoing inside you.
Spring came early that year. Evan joined the middle-school baseball team. He laughed more, talked more, stayed out later. He was becoming himself, untethered from her shadow.
Until the day I got a letter.
Not from her — from the prison psychologist.
Inmate Lauren Bennett passed away from cardiac arrest during the night of March 12th. She requested one call to her husband, but staff were unable to reach you. Please contact the facility if you’d like to claim her personal belongings.
I read it twice, then a third time. A strange, hollow feeling opened up in my chest. Relief and grief tangled so tightly I couldn’t tell them apart.
The next morning, I told Evan. He didn’t cry. He just stared at the floor.
“Are they gonna bury her?” he asked.
“Yeah,” I said. “They will.”
He nodded, then asked, “Do we have to go?”
“No,” I said softly. “We don’t have to do anything.”
But that night, I couldn’t sleep. And at dawn, I found myself driving anyway — to the prison cemetery, a sad field of numbered stones under a gray sky. Her grave was fresh, the earth still soft.
I didn’t bring flowers. I brought the ring I’d pulled out of the garbage disposal years ago — the metal twisted and scarred, the engraving barely visible.
I placed it on the dirt. “Here,” I whispered. “You can keep your lies.”
For weeks after, I waited for something to change. For a sense of peace, or maybe for the nightmares to stop. But life doesn’t hand out clean endings. It just moves forward.
One afternoon, Evan came home holding a permission slip. “Field trip to the state museum,” he said. “Can you sign?”
I looked at the paper. The signature line at the bottom — Parent/Guardian. I hesitated, then wrote my name. Just mine. No and Lauren Bennett.
It felt like closing a final door.
That summer, Evan found a stray cat behind the garage — thin, wild, hissing at everything. He spent weeks coaxing it closer, leaving food, talking softly. One evening, it finally let him touch it, purring like a broken engine.
He looked up at me, smiling for the first time in months. “See, Dad? Some things just need time to trust again.”
I smiled back, realizing he wasn’t just talking about the cat.
By fall, the trial, the confession, the years of whispers had become background noise. But sometimes, late at night, I’d still walk past the closet and feel that old echo of dread. The house was brighter now, repainted, rearranged — but certain ghosts don’t care about renovations.
One night, I opened the closet door. Inside, there was nothing but clean air and hangers. Still, I said quietly, “I see you.”
Because acknowledging the past doesn’t feed it. It drains its power.
Evan starts high school next year. He wants to study architecture. He says he likes the idea of designing spaces that don’t have hidden rooms.
When he told me that, I laughed harder than I had in years. Because maybe that’s the lesson. Maybe the only way to fight secrets is to build places with light.
I keep a small box now — not hidden, not locked. Inside are three things:
Evan’s first baseball card. A photo of the two of us at Cannon Beach, the ocean behind us. And a folded piece of paper that reads: You don’t lose people when they die. You lose them when you see who they really are.
Some nights, I read it again, not because I need to remember her — but because I need to remember myself.
The story ends the same way every night: with the sound of my son breathing softly down the hall, the cat curled at his feet, and the closet door wide open — proof that there’s nothing left to hide.
THE END