And on top of one box was another envelope.
This one was smaller.
And it had one word written on it:
FIRST.
I opened it.
Inside was a flash drive, taped to a note.
The note said:
“Watch before you read.”
My pulse hammered.
I found my old phone in my bag—cheap and basic, something the reentry program had provided. It could still play videos.
I plugged in the flash drive using the adapter Harold had included in the envelope without me noticing.
A folder popped up.
One video file.
Titled:
“Eli — The Truth.”
My finger hovered over it.
Then I pressed play.
THE VIDEO MESSAGE
My father’s face filled the screen.
He looked thinner than I remembered. Pale. The kind of pale that isn’t just sickness—it’s time running out.
But his eyes were steady.
“Eli,” he said softly. “If you’re watching this, you’re out.”
He paused, swallowing.
“I’m proud of you.”
That one sentence nearly broke me.
Then his voice hardened—not cruel, just firm.
“I need you to listen carefully. This is going to hurt. But it’s the kind of hurt that finally makes sense.”