PART 2: THE BLACK SQUARE EVERY ZEYOOS.

The screen of my phone lit up a third time, the vibration buzzing against my palm like an angry hornet.

“Mom, I see the restroom sign. If you aren’t out here in sixty seconds, I’m coming in.”

A cold sweat broke out across my neck. Matthew wasn’t just a doting son trying to manage an aging mother anymore. The mask had completely slipped. I looked down at the crumpled piece of paper in my hand, my granddaughter Lily’s shaky purple handwriting staring back at me: RUN. DO NOT GET ON THE PLANE. LOOK FOR THE BLACK SQUARE.

I blended into the thick crowd of arriving passengers pouring out of the international terminal, my heart hammering against my ribs. I couldn’t go back to Brooklyn; my house was sold. The money from the sale was already sitting in a joint account that Matthew had “helped” me set up. I had no car, one carry-on bag containing nothing but a few clothes and my medications, and a cell phone that was essentially a tracking device.

Suddenly, it clicked. The phone.

If Matthew checked his find-my-phone app, he would see I wasn’t in the restroom. He would see my dot moving toward the taxi stand.

With trembling fingers, I didn’t just turn it off; I looked for a place to discard it. Passing a large, metal trash bin near the exit, I dropped the vibrating device inside, buried beneath empty coffee cups and half-eaten pastries. I felt naked without it, but lighter. Free.

I stepped out into the humid New York air. The yellow cabs lined up like a row of giant, mechanical ants.

“Where to, ma’am?” a cab driver asked, popping open his trunk.

“Just… toward Queens. The nearest subway station, please,” I stammered, my voice cracking. I didn’t want a paper trail of a long cab ride, and I didn’t have much cash.

As the taxi pulled away from the curb of JFK Airport, I looked back through the tinted rear window. My breath caught in my throat. Standing by the glass doors of the terminal was Matthew. His perfect, manicured smile was completely gone, replaced by a terrifying, frantic rage. He was scanning the crowd, holding his phone to his ear. Next to him, Lily was clutching her small backpack, her eyes scanning the departing cars. For a split second, I thought she looked right at my taxi.

I sank low into the vinyl seat, praying they hadn’t seen me.
Unraveling the Purple Thread

The cab dropped me off near a bustling subway station in Jamaica, Queens. I paid the driver with a twenty-dollar bill—one of the few I had managed to keep in my wallet—and walked into a diner across the street to collect my thoughts.

Sitting in a vinyl booth that smelled of old grease and maple syrup, I flattened Lily’s drawing on the table.

What did it mean? A house. A crossed-out window. A black square next to the door.

“It is where they don’t let you leave,” she had told me.

If Matthew wasn’t taking me to a beautiful apartment in Paris, where was he taking me? I thought back to the paperwork he had hounded me to sign over the last six months. He told me it was medical insurance waivers for France, power of attorney for the sale of the Brooklyn house, and relocation visas. But I remembered a specific logo on the top of one of the thick packets. It wasn’t a French government seal. It was a stylized, modern logo of a tree, but the branches looked oddly sharp, almost like a cage. And underneath, there were words I hadn’t paid attention to because Matthew had quickly flipped the page to the signature line: V.A. H. Management.

I needed internet access. I walked up to the diner’s cashier, an older woman with kind eyes and a nametag that read ‘Maria’.

“Excuse me,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “I lost my phone. Is there any way I could use a computer or a tablet for just five minutes? I’ll pay you.”

Maria looked at my disheveled appearance, my trembling hands, and the sheer panic in my eyes. She didn’t ask questions. She reached under the counter and pulled out an old, scratched iPad. “Use the diner’s Wi-Fi, honey. Take your time.”

“Thank you. Thank you so much.”

I sat back down and typed “V.A.H. Management” into the search bar.

The results made the blood run cold in my veins.

Vanguard Asylum & Hospice Management. They were a private, high-security corporate entity that operated specialized, closed-door facilities for wealthy families looking to “permanently relocate” elderly relatives with severe cognitive decline—or relatives who simply possessed assets their children wanted to control.

I scrolled further, my eyes blurring with tears of betrayal. Because of the Power of Attorney I had blindly signed, Matthew had legally declared me mentally incompetent. The apartment in Paris didn’t exist. He was flying me to France because Vanguard operated its most restrictive, private facility in a remote forest outside of Versailles. Once I stepped foot inside that facility, under French jurisdiction and under their private contract, I would never be allowed to leave. I would be a ghost, legally alive but effectively erased. And Matthew would have total control of the three million dollars from my Brooklyn property sale.

But what about the black square?

I searched for Vanguard’s facilities closer to home. They had one in upstate New York, one in Connecticut, and a corporate administrative office right here in New York City.

I clicked on the image gallery for their corporate headquarters, located in an industrial sector of Long Island City. It was a renovated, brutalist concrete building. I zoomed in on the architectural photos of the main entrance.

My breath hitched.

Right next to the heavy, keycard-protected glass doors was a prominent, solid black architectural column—a literal black square built into the concrete facade.

Lily hadn’t just drawn a random scary house. She had seen the brochures. She had seen where her father was planning the paperwork. But why did she write “LOOK FOR THE BLACK SQUARE” if that was the place where they wouldn’t let me leave? Why would she tell me to go to the enemy’s doorstep?

Then, I remembered. Two weeks ago, Matthew had brought home a guest for dinner. A quiet man in a dark suit who kept checking his watch. Matthew had called him “the notary,” but Lily had been playing under the dining room table. Later that night, I overheard Matthew arguing with someone on the phone in the hallway, saying, “If the auditor at the Long Island City office looks too closely at the signature dates, the whole transfer will freeze. I need the hard copies approved before we board the flight.”

The hard copies. The real deeds. The original, un-notarized papers were still at their corporate office. If I could get to that building, to the “Black Square,” and find the auditor or destroy those documents before they were digitized and processed at the end of the business day, Matthew’s legal stranglehold over my life and my money would shatter.

I looked at the clock on the diner wall. It was 2:30 PM. The corporate office would close at 5:00 PM.

I had exactly two and a half hours.
Into the Lion’s Den

I thanked Maria, returned the iPad, and took the E train toward Long Island City. Every time the subway doors opened, I expected to see Matthew’s towering frame stepping onto the train, flanked by airport security or police officers he had lied to, telling them his “senile mother ran away.”

When I exited the subway station at 4:15 PM, the sky had turned a gloomy, bruised purple. Rain began to drizzle, slicking the industrial, warehouse-lined streets.

I walked two blocks until I saw it.

The building was imposing, windowless on the lower floors, made of dark, poured concrete. And there, looming beside the glass entrance like a monolith, was the black square column.

My chest tightened. I was a 68-year-old woman with a bad knee, trying to infiltrate a high-security corporate building. But the alternative was a gilded cage in France until the day I died. I adjusted my coat, smoothed my hair, and forced myself to walk with the confidence of someone who belonged there.

I pushed through the heavy glass doors.

The lobby was sterile, smelling heavily of bleach and expensive leather. A sleek, white marble desk sat in the center. Behind it sat a young receptionist with a headset, typing furiously. behind her was a set of heavy security turnstiles that required a badge to pass.

“Hello,” I said, putting on my best upper-class, authoritative voice. “I am here to see the chief auditor regarding the Matthew Vance file. There is an emergency discrepancy with the Brooklyn property transfer.”

The receptionist stopped typing. She looked at me, her eyes tracking my wet coat and my cheap carry-on bag. “Do you have an appointment, ma’am? And can I see your ID?”

“I don’t have time for an appointment,” I said, my voice rising slightly, channeling a desperation that was all too real. “My son is currently boarding a flight to Paris, and if these documents are processed with the current errors, Vanguard will be liable for a multi-million dollar fraud lawsuit. Look up the Vance file. Now.”

The word lawsuit worked like magic. She quickly began tapping on her keyboard.

“Matthew Vance… yes, I see the file. It’s currently in the third-floor administrative archives for final verification. But the auditor, Mr. Sterling, is already in a meeting regarding that account.”

He was already here? No, that didn’t make sense. Matthew was at JFK. Who was in the meeting?

“I need to go up,” I insisted, moving toward the turnstiles.

“Wait, ma’am, you can’t go up without a badge!” the receptionist called out, reaching for her desk phone. “Security, I need—”

Suddenly, the glass entry doors behind me flew open with a violent crash.
The Trap Snaps Shut

I spun around.

Standing in the doorway, drenched in sweat and rain, his coat disheveled and his eyes wide with a manic, terrifying focus, was Matthew.

He hadn’t boarded the plane. He had tracked me. But how? I had thrown the phone away!

Then, my eyes fell on my carry-on bag. The small, silver luggage tag hanging from the zipper. It wasn’t mine. Matthew had bought it for me the day before. It wasn’t just a tag—it had a tile tracker embedded inside it.

“Mom,” Matthew breathed, his voice a low, dangerous growl that cut through the quiet lobby. He took a step toward me, his shoes squeaking against the marble floor. “You missed the flight. Do you have any idea how much trouble you’ve caused?”

parte 02