Jonah Price had lived under tainted shadows for as long as he could remember; his father's arrest and the whispers that he had his father's blood. He grew up a recluse, despised by many, his only "sin" being Elijah Price's son. He took the blame for being his father's son.
Twenty years ago, when he was only eight, Elijah Price, his father, had been labeled a serial killer. Convicted. Imprisoned. Dead within ten years. The city spat upon his grave and crossed the street when it saw Jonah. "Like father, like son," they would whisper.
Now, the killings had returned. Same precision. Same ritual. Same fear. And all fingers pointed at the serial killer's heir.
The police had identified Jonah as the logical suspect. The newspapers screamed "Bloodline Killer." And in his dreams, Jonah felt guilty, because when he awakened from his blackouts, he remembered flashes of violence his own hands had perpetrated. Gripping necks, water closing above a face, the smell of blood. He was just so miserable because he could neither understand nor explain a thing.
Then came the day a letter was slid under his door. It was in his father's handwriting.
"You can't escape who we are. You can't escape your destiny."
Jonah's chest tightened. His father was dead! Buried!Ten years now! But yet the letter, the loops, the jagged T's, it was unmistakable. He would recognize it anywhere as his father's..
Out of desperation, Jonah began digging into the cold case. The trial transcripts, the pieces of evidence that had put his dad away. He started reconstructing the truth no one even thought to confront. Evidence was "discovered," by his uncle David Price. Statements were tracked back to David. He was always there - the grieving brother, an influential member of their community, the man who raised Jonah after Elijah's arrest.
A single witness. A single confidant. His uncle, David Price.
He had testified about Elijah’s “violent tendencies.”
In the basement of the old Price house, Jonah discovered the shrine — the newspaper clippings, the photographs of old and new victims, and the fresh letters in that same, recognizable hand.
Then his uncle stepped out of the shadows.
“You were always meant to find this,” David said softly.
“You framed him,” Jonah managed to whisper out. "It was you all along."
There was a brightness in David's eyes. “Elijah was never strong enough. He wore the mask, but I did the work, and you, Jonah… you will carry it on.”
"You son of a —"
And with a burning rage in his heart, Jonah lurched forward and clawed at his uncle. The fight was brutal. His rage against his betrayal giving him double strength, but he was no match for his uncle's agility. But luckily for him, Detective Ives and her team busted through the door before much harm could be done. They had been following Jonah's frantic trail.
David was arrested as he screamed about destiny and bloodlines and the "inheritance." The truth was unraveled. Elijah had been innocent all along, a man destroyed by his brother's shadows.
The city rewrote Elijah's name, and the media buzzed — Jonah was painted as the tragic heir to a false legacy.
But the mystery lingered. Something didn't quite add up.
When the police started cataloging David's cellar, they discovered something impossible. Letters in Elijah's hand as though they had been recently written.
Different handwriting analysts swore they were authentic. They were not David's but Elijah's.
The investigating team including Jonah were startled by this revelation.
Elijah had been dead and buried since ten years ago. Who then was writing in his exact hand?
David's only words were; "Blood calls to blood...and you Jonah..you will heed the call when the time is right..... Just as your father did."
The city decided to close the case when they couldn't solve the mystery, and Jonah tried to put his life back together again.
But he couldn't shake off the fear that gnawed at the back of his mind.
Was his father, Elijah, truly innocent? Had David orchestrated it all— or had David merely followed his brother's script, written from beyond the grave?
In the silence of the night, when sleep was heavy, Jonah always found himself dreaming of bloodied hands closing around throats.
Sometimes, when he woke up, he wasn't sure whose hands they were. His uncle's. His father's. Or his own.
"Blood calls to blood." He whispered softly in the dark.
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