They found jewelry boxes containing hundreds of pieces of valuable jewelry, rings, necklaces, bracelets, earrings, each piece cataloged in a notebook with the name of the woman it had belonged to, and an estimated value.
They found life insurance policies, bank account information, property deeds, all in the names of different women.
They found notebooks containing detailed information about each woman, their daily routines, their financial assets, their family situations, their vulnerabilities, their psychological profiles.
One notebook in particular would prove crucial to understanding Alan Parker’s systematic approach to murder.
The notebook contained what could only be described as a business plan for serial killing.
With each victim treated as a project with costs, benefits, and return on investment, Parker had rated each woman on various factors: ease of manipulation, asset value, family situation, risk of detection.
He had documented his methods, how to establish false identities, how to integrate into communities, how to build trust over months, how to identify vulnerable women, how to create situations where they could be killed without witnesses, how to fake death certificates, how to cremate bodies and present ashes as legitimate remains.
The notebook contained an entry about Rachel Morrison dated January 15th, 2019, 3 months before her death.
Written in clinical detached language that made FBI agents physically sick to read.
Subject RM has proven to be one of the easier acquisitions, widowed stus 3 years post loss created optimal vulnerability window.
Active presence of dependent daughter provides additional emotional leverage and urgency for subject to demonstrate life has returned to normal functioning.
Subject demonstrates strong community ties which aid in legitimacy establishment but creates minimal risk due to limited close family relationships.
Asset value approximately $180,000.
Liquid savings and checking accounts plus property equity estimated $90,000 plus jewelry collection estimated $20,000.
Life insurance policy established postmarriage valued at $500,000 with subject sister as contingent beneficiary can be modified post marriage.
Total estimated value $790,000 for approximately five months investment of time and minimal financial outlay.
Excellent return on investment compared to previous acquisitions.
Subject has shown complete trust.
No suspicion of true identity or intent.
Integration into subject’s community has been successful.
Church attendance, volunteer work, and youth coaching provides substantial legitimacy cover.
Subjects daughter accepts presence.
Sister approves relationship.
Colleagues and neighbors view relationship positively.
No concerning questions or background investigations detected.
Execution planned for Costa Rica trip.
Location selected for ease of body disposal and low probability of detailed investigation.
Subject is trusting personality type and will not suspect danger until too late.
Cremation will be straightforward as subject has no close family aside from sister who has proven to not be naturally suspicious.
Anticipate clean exit from Portland with assets liquidated and relocation to Seattle area by June 2019 to begin identification of next subject.
FBI agents reading this entry realized they were dealing with a serial killer who approached murder not as an emotional crime, but as a business venture, complete with market research, costbenefit analysis, and strategic planning.
Alan Parker had been killing women for money for at least 15 years, possibly longer.
Systematically selecting victims based on their asset values and vulnerability factors.
building elaborate false identities to gain their trust, marrying them to gain legal access to their finances, taking them to remote locations to murder them, and then returning to collect life insurance payouts and liquidate their assets before moving to a new city and starting the process over again.
The investigation expanded rapidly as FBI teams in multiple states began connecting cold cases and suspicious deaths to Alan Parker.
Using the information in his notebooks, agents were able to identify at least six previous victims, each with a similar pattern.
Vulnerable women, recent widow or divorce, assets in the range of $500,000 to $1.
5 million, isolated from extended family, killed during trips to remote locations, bodies cremated, deaths attributed to accidents.
The first identified victim was Patricia Romano, age 34, who died in Montana in 2004 while on her honeymoon with a man who called himself James Romano.
Patricia had been a divorced mother of two boys, working as a dental hygienist in Billings.
She had met James at a church singles group where he presented himself as a recently divorced insurance salesman rebuilding his life.
Patricia’s sister, Carol, had told police in 2004 that Patricia fell from a cliff while hiking in Glacia National Park that James had returned devastated with her ashes and a death certificate from Montana authorities.
But when FBI agents reviewed the case in 2019, they found that no death certificate had ever been filed with Montana Vital records.
That the document James Romano provided to Carol was a forgery.
That there was no record of Patricia’s death with park rangers or local police.
Patricia’s cremated remains were among the six urns found in Alan Parker’s storage unit.
DNA testing confirmed the ashes were Patricia Romanos.
Alan Parker’s notebook contained an entry about Patricia, describing her as his first successful application of the complete method he had been developing, noting that he had learned from mistakes in earlier attempts that had been too risky or hadn’t yielded sufficient financial return.
He estimated that he had gained approximately $400,000 from Patricia’s life insurance policy, savings, and jewelry, a sum that gave him the capital to invest more heavily in creating false identities for future victims.
The second victim was Michelle Chen, age 41, who died on a camping trip in Utah in 2006.
Michelle had been a widow living in Salt Lake City, working as a nurse practitioner, raising a teenage daughter alone.
She had met a man who called himself David Chen at a grief support group where he claimed to be processing the loss of his wife to breast cancer.
They dated for 8 months before marrying in a small ceremony.
Less than two weeks after the wedding, David suggested a camping trip to a remote area of southeastern Utah.
Michelle never returned.
David reported that she had been bitten by a rattlesnake while hiking, that she had died before they could reach medical help, that he had her body cremated in accordance with her wishes.
Michelle’s ashes were among those found in Parker’s storage unit.
His notebook described her as a high value target with excellent assets and minimal family complications.
The third victim was Karen Wells, aged 38, who died on a beach vacation in Mexico in 2009.
Karen had been divorced working as a real estate agent in Phoenix, Arizona.
She met a man who called himself Robert Wells at a professional networking event.
He claimed to work in mortgage lending.
They dated for 10 months before marrying.
On their honeymoon in Puerto Varta, Karen allegedly drowned while swimming.
Robert returned to Phoenix with her ashes, explaining that Mexican authorities required immediate cremation in cases of drowning deaths.
Karen’s ashes were in Parker’s collection.
His notebook noted that the Mexico location had worked well due to less rigorous death investigation protocols compared to the United States.
The fourth victim was Sandra Price, age 36, who died on a cruise in the Caribbean in 2011.
Sandra had been a widow living in Atlanta, Georgia, working as a financial analyst.
She met a man who called himself Thomas Price through an online dating site designed for professionals.
They dated for 7 months before marrying.
During their honeymoon cruise, Sandra allegedly fell overboard during rough seas at night.
The cruise line conducted a search but never recovered her body.
M.
Thomas Price told Sandra’s family that the cruise line had provided documentation of her death and that he was handling the legal and financial aftermath.
But Sandra Price’s ashes were in Alan Parker’s storage unit, meaning she had never actually fallen overboard.
She had been killed somewhere on land, her body cremated, and the cruise story fabricated to explain her disappearance.
Parker’s notebook described the cruise scenario as high risk but successful, noting that he would not use that method again due to too many potential witnesses and complications.
The fifth victim was Jennifer Boyd, age 43, who died on a wine country tour in California in 2014.
Jennifer had been divorced working as a marketing director in San Francisco.
She met a man who called himself Christopher Boyd at a charity fundraiser for cancer research.
He claimed to work in pharmaceutical sales.
They dated for 9 months before marrying.
During a weekend trip to Napa Valley, Jennifer allegedly died from a severe allergic reaction to something she ate at a restaurant.
Christopher returned to San Francisco with her ashes, explaining that Napa County health regulations required immediate cremation in cases of severe anaphilaxis to prevent disease transmission.
Jennifer’s ashes were among those found by FBI agents.
Parker’s notebook described her as his highest value victim at that point, with assets totaling approximately $1.
2 million, including her home in San Francisco, retirement accounts, and a trust fund from her parents.
The sixth victim was Lisa Martinez, age 39, who died on a mountain retreat in Colorado in 2016.
Lisa had been a widow living in Denver, working as a corporate attorney.
She met a man who called himself Steven Martinez at a continuing legal education conference.
He claimed to be an attorney specializing in environmental law.
They dated for 8 months before marrying during a weekend at a remote mountain cabin that Steven had rented.
Lisa allegedly died from carbon monoxide poisoning due to a faulty heater.
Steven returned to Denver with her ashes, explaining that Colorado law required immediate cremation in cases of toxic exposure deaths.
Lisa’s ashes were in Parker’s collection.
His notebook described her as an ideal victim.
Successful, wealthy, isolated from family, professionally competent, but emotionally vulnerable after the loss of her husband, eager for a second chance at happiness.
And finally, Rachel Morrison, age 38, who died in Costa Rica in 2019.
Rachel had been a widow living in Portland, Oregon, working as an elementary school teacher.
She met a man who called himself Derek Morrison at a community fundraiser.
He claimed to work in commercial real estate.
They dated for 5 months before marrying.
During their honeymoon in Costa Rica, Rachel was drugged, buried alive, and cremated.
Derek Morrison, whose real name was Alan Parker, returned to Portland with her ashes and might have gotten away with it completely if not for a 12-year-old girl who noticed that her mother’s jewelry was in the wrong place.
Seven women, 15 years, estimated total value of assets stolen, $4.
3 million.
That was Alan Parker’s legacy when he was arrested on May 3rd, 2019 at his apartment in Portland.
FBI agents approached him as he was leaving to go to the gym.
A normal Saturday morning activity for a man who appeared to have no concerns about being caught.
He showed no emotion during the arrest, no surprise or fear or anger.
He simply allowed himself to be handcuffed, read his Miranda rights, and taken into custody.
When agents told him they had found the storage unit with the urns and the notebooks and all the evidence of his crimes, he showed no reaction at all, as if this information had no personal relevance to him whatsoever.
During interrogation at FBI headquarters in Portland, Alan Parker waved his right to an attorney and agreed to talk to agents.
Over the course of 12 hours, he described his methods in detail, speaking about the murders as if discussing a business operation rather than the deaths of seven human beings.
He explained how he had developed his system over many years, starting with less sophisticated approaches in his 20s and 30s, gradually refining his methods until they became nearly foolproof.
He talked about how he selected victims based on detailed research of public records, social media presence, and community involvement.
He described how he created false identities by obtaining birth certificates of deceased individuals who would have been approximately his age, using those birth certificates to obtain driver’s licenses and social security numbers, building credit histories and employment records that could withstand background checks.
He explained how he integrated into communities by identifying vulnerable women and then positioning himself in places where he would naturally encounter them.
Churches, volunteer organizations, grief support groups, professional networking events, charity fundraisers.
He described how he studied each woman for weeks or months before making initial contact, learning their routines, their interests, their vulnerabilities, their family situations.
He talked about how he built trust slowly over months of seemingly genuine friendship and romance, never rushing, never showing any sign of danger until the moment he decided to kill.
When asked why he did it, Alan Parker gave an answer that horrified everyone who heard it.
He said it was an efficient way to make money.
He said that working a traditional job would have taken decades to accumulate the wealth he had gained in 15 years of killing.
He said that targeting widows and divorces with assets made logical sense because they were emotionally vulnerable and financially stable.
He said that killing them during trips to remote locations minimized risk of detection.
He said that cremating bodies eliminated forensic evidence.
He said that his method had a nearly perfect success rate until Rachel Morrison and the only reason he was caught then was random bad luck that a child noticed jewelry in a closet.
When asked if he felt any guilt or remorse about the seven women he killed or the children he left motherless, Alan Parker said he had never thought about it.
That he didn’t see the victims as real people, but as assets to be acquired, that their children would be resilient and would survive just as millions of other children survived the loss of parents.
He compared what he did to a business transaction, saying that the women received a few months of companionship and attention before their deaths.
So, it wasn’t as if they got nothing in return for what he took from them.
He said it had been a mutually beneficial arrangement except for the ending, which he acknowledged was unfortunate but necessary.
The trial of Alan Parker began in September 2020 and lasted 3 months.
The prosecution presented overwhelming evidence.
The notebooks documenting his plans, the jewelry and personal effects from all seven victims, the cremated remains, the false identification documents, the financial records showing him accessing and liquidating the victim’s assets, the testimony of family members who identified their loved ones belongings, the forensic evidence from Costa Rica showing Rachel Morrison’s burial and cremation, and Alan Parker’s own confession describing ing every detail of his methodology.
The defense attempted to argue that Alan Parker suffered from a personality disorder that prevented him from understanding the moral implications of his actions, that he genuinely believed he was engaging in business transactions rather than murder, that he should be found not guilty by reason of insanity.
But the prosecution demonstrated that Parker had acted with clear premeditation and sophisticated planning.
That he had taken extensive steps to avoid detection, including creating false identities and destroying evidence.
That he had successfully maintained a normal appearance in multiple communities over many years, and that his own notebook showed he fully understood he was committing crimes and could be punished if caught.
Families of all seven victims attended the trial, sitting together in the courtroom, holding hands, supporting each other through the horrific details of how their loved ones had died.
Emma Morrison, now 13 years old, attended portions of the trial with Jennifer.
She read a victim impact statement during the sentencing phase, describing what it was like to lose her mother twice.
once to death and once to the realization that her death was not an accident, but a calculated murder by a man Emma had trusted.
A man she had allowed into her life and her home.
A man who had coached her soccer team and attended her school events and pretended to care about her while actually planning to kill her mother for money.
Emma’s statement reduced many in the courtroom to tears.
She described how she had trusted Derek, how she had started to think of him as a potential father figure, how she had felt guilty after her mother’s death for not being nicer to him or more welcoming.
She described the moment she found the jewelry box and knew something was wrong.
The feeling of her world collapsing when she realized her mother might have been murdered.
She described the nightmares she still had.
dreams where she tried to warn her mother not to go to Costa Rica, not to trust Derek, not to get on the plane.
She described what it was like to be 13 years old and orphaned, living with her aunt and uncle and cousins who loved her but weren’t her parents, going to therapy three times a week to deal with trauma and grief and anger.
Knowing that the person who killed her mother was still alive while her mother was gone forever, Jennifer testified about Rachel’s kindness, her dedication to her students, her love for Emma, her desire to build a new life after the tragedy of Michael’s death.
She described Rachel as someone who made everyone around her better, who found joy in small moments, who loved deeply and completely, who deserved to grow old and watch her daughter graduate from high school and college, get married, have children.
She described the pain of learning that Rachel’s death was not an accident, but murder, that the man Jennifer had welcomed into their family had been planning Rachel’s death from the moment he met her.
Margaret Torres, Rachel’s fellow teacher and closest friend at Lincoln Elementary, testified about Rachel’s impact on her students and colleagues.
She described how Rachel had created a classroom environment where every student felt valued, how she had spent her own money on books and supplies because she believed all children deserved access to learning resources, how she had stayed late to tutor students who were struggling.
how she had written personalized notes to each student on the last day of school every year.
She described the hole Rachel’s death had left in the school community.
How students still talked about her years later.
How her classroom had been turned into a memorial space where students could go to read or think.
Carol Bennett, Patricia Romano’s sister, testified about Patricia’s life and the 15 years Carol had spent believing her sister died in a hiking accident.
She described the devastation of learning in 2019 that Patricia had actually been murdered, that the man Carol had welcomed into Patricia’s life and trusted to care for her sister had actually been planning her death all along.
She described how Patricia’s sons, now in their 20s, had struggled with reopening old wounds, learning that their mother’s death was murder, dealing with rage and grief that had nowhere to go because they couldn’t change what had happened.
Family members of Michelle Chen, Karen Wells, Sandra Price, Jennifer Boyd, and Lisa Martinez all testified, creating a collective portrait of seven women who had been more than Alan Parker’s victims, who had been mothers and daughters and sisters and friends, who had careers and interests and dreams, who had survived loss and rebuilt their lives and dared to hope for happiness again, only to encounter a predator who saw them not as human beings, but as opportunities for profit.
The most chilling testimony came from Dr. Elizabeth Reeves, a forensic psychologist who had evaluated Alan Parker at the request of the prosecution.
Dr. Reeves testified that Parker met all the diagnostic criteria for antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy, specifically noting his complete lack of empathy, his view of other people as objects to be used, his sophisticated manipulation skills, his grandiose sense of self-worth, his lack of remorse or guilt, and his ability to maintain a facade of normaly while engaging in predatory behavior.
She explained that Parker was not insane in any legal sense, that he understood the difference between right and wrong, that he had acted with clear premeditation and planning, and that his methodical approach to murder demonstrated sophisticated reasoning skills.
Dr. Reeves explained that predators like Parker often targeted vulnerable people, not out of any emotional drive, but because vulnerability made targets easier to manipulate and control.
She noted that Parker had specifically selected women who were in transition periods of their lives, widows and divorcees who were trying to rebuild after loss.
Women who wanted to believe in second chances and were therefore more likely to trust someone who presented himself as safe and stable and kind.
She explained that Parker’s ability to integrate into communities, to present himself as a helpful neighbor and dedicated volunteer and caring partner was a common trait among sophisticated predators who understood that the best disguise was not to hide but to become hypervisible in positive ways.
When asked if someone like Alan Parker could be rehabilitated, Dr. Reeves said no.
She explained that antisocial personality disorder especially when combined with psychopathy to the degree Parker demonstrated was not treatable through therapy or medication.
She said that people with this combination of traits saw other humans as things to be used, that they felt no authentic emotional connections to others, that they were fundamentally incapable of empathy or remorse.
She said that the only thing that stopped people like Parker from committing more crimes was incapacitation.
removing them from society permanently, so they no longer had access to potential victims.
Alan Parker sat through all of this testimony without visible emotion.
When family members described their pain, he showed no reaction.
When Emma read her victim impact statement, he stared at her with the same clinical detachment he had shown Rachel in those final moments before injecting her with seditive.
When the jury was shown photos of the victims, happy photos from before they met him, photos of Rachel and Emma together, photos of Patricia with her sons, photos of the other five women living their lives before encountering a monster, Parker examined the photos as if looking at strangers in whom he had no interest.
When given the opportunity to make a statement before sentencing, Alan Parker declined.
He had nothing to say to the families of his victims.
No apology to offer, no explanation beyond what he had already provided in his interrogation.
He simply sat in his chair and waited for the judge to pronounce sentence.
The jury deliberated for 4 hours before returning guilty verdicts on all seven counts of firstdegree murder, multiple counts of fraud, forgery, identity theft, and dozens of other charges.
The judge sentenced Alan Parker to seven consecutive life sentences without possibility of parole.
Meaning he would die in prison, meaning he would never again be free to hurt anyone.
Never again able to prey on vulnerable women.
Never again able to wear his victim’s jewelry as trophies.
As he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs and leg shackles, one of the family members shouted, “You should burn the way you burned them.
” Alan Parker didn’t react.
He didn’t turn his head or change his expression.
He just shuffled out of the courtroom surrounded by federal marshals, disappearing into the prison system where he would spend the rest of his life.
The aftermath of the Alan Parker case changed how law enforcement agencies across the country handle suspicious deaths and missing persons cases involving recently married couples.
It led to new protocols requiring more thorough verification of death certificates from foreign countries, making it harder for criminals to fake international deaths.
It prompted the State Department to create a system where all American citizen deaths abroad must be verified through the embassy before cremation or burial can occur.
It led to recommendations that life insurance companies conduct more extensive background checks on recent spouses before paying out death benefits.
Several states passed laws requiring longer waiting periods between marriage and the ability to change beneficiaries on life insurance policies.
Specifically to prevent predators like Parker from quickly marrying victims and immediately naming themselves as beneficiaries.
Dating safety organizations developed new programs warning people about predators who use community integration and slow relationship building as manipulation tactics.
Emphasizing that danger doesn’t always come from obvious places like online dating profiles of foreign strangers, but can come from the seemingly normal person sitting next to you in church or coaching your child’s sports team.
For Emma Morrison and the children of Alan Parker’s six other victims, there was no happy ending, no justice that could bring their mothers back or erased the trauma of learning they died terrified and alone at the hands of someone they loved.
Emma was raised by Jennifer and her family, graduated high school with honors in 2024, and is currently attending Portland State University, studying social work with a focus on victim advocacy.
She speaks at victim rights events and law enforcement training sessions, telling Rachel’s story not to gain sympathy, but to educate others about predatory behavior.
She warns that danger doesn’t always announce itself with obvious red flags.
that evil doesn’t always act evil.
That someone can volunteer at church and coach soccer and bring donuts to fundraisers and still be a monster hiding in plain sight.
Emma tells audiences to trust their instincts when something feels wrong, even if they can’t articulate why.
She encourages people to maintain connections with family and friends who can provide outside perspective on new relationships.
She promotes background checks and reference verification, noting that even someone who seems perfect might be living under a false identity.
She asks people to remember that her mother did nothing wrong, that Rachel Morrison was not foolish or naive or careless, that she was simply a kind woman who met a skilled predator who had spent 15 years perfecting his craft, and that anyone could have been fooled by someone that practiced at deception.
Lincoln Elementary School created a memorial garden in Rachel’s honor.
A quiet space where students can sit and read and remember a teacher who believed every child deserved patience and encouragement.
A bench in the garden has a plaque that reads in memory of Rachel Morrison who taught us that kindness matters, that every student deserves to be seen, and that love should build us up, not tear us down.
Every year on the anniversary of Rachel’s death, current and former students gather at the memorial garden to share stories about how Rachel influenced their lives.
Keeping her memory alive as more than just a victim of a serial killer, but as a woman who lived with purpose and touched hundreds of lives through her work, Jennifer maintains relationships with the families of Alan Parker’s other six victims.
They form a small community of people bound by shared tragedy and shared determination to honor their loved ones memories.
They meet annually on a video call, sharing updates about their lives, supporting each other through difficult anniversaries and holidays, finding comfort in being with people who understand their specific grief.
They have advocated successfully for legislative changes, making it harder for criminals to create fake identities and fake death certificates.
They have worked with the FBI to develop training materials about long-term predatory behavior patterns that officers can use to identify similar cases.
They have turned their private pain into public purpose, ensuring that Patricia, Michelle, Karen, Sandra, Jennifer, Lisa, and Rachel are remembered not just for how they died, but for how they lived.
The emerald ring and wedding band that Alan Parker wore when he returned from Costa Rica were recovered and given to Emma.
She keeps them in a safe deposit box, unable to wear them, but unable to let them go.
a reminder of her mother’s life and the man who ended it.
She sometimes wonders what Rachel would think about how her death exposed a serial killer.
How her murder led to justice for six other families? How the investigation changed protocols that might save future lives? Would Rachel find meaning in that? Would she be glad that her death wasn’t completely meaningless? Emma will never know.
All she knows is that her mother went on a honeymoon expecting to start a new chapter and instead met a monster who saw her not as a person but as a financial opportunity.
Alan Parker remains in federal prison serving his seven consecutive life sentences.
He will die there.
Never again free to manipulate another vulnerable woman.
Never again able to add to his collection of earns and jewelry and insurance policies.
He has given no interviews, issued no statements, shown no remorse.
He simply exists in prison, aging slowly, waiting to die, having taken seven lives and destroyed dozens more through the ripple effects of his crimes.
The story of Rachel Morrison is not a story with a satisfying ending.
There is no resurrection of the dead, no undoing of the trauma inflicted on children who lost their mothers.
But there is meaning in how Rachel’s death was not the end of Alan Parker’s killing spree, but the moment it finally stopped.
How Emma’s sharp observation and Jennifer’s determination to verify inconsistencies led to an investigation that saved future lives.
How seven families finally got truth about what really happened to their loved ones.
Rachel Morrison deserved to grow old with Emma.
To see her daughter graduate and get married and have children, to continue teaching and making her community better through daily acts of kindness.
To find genuine happiness with someone who truly loved her.
She deserved a long life full of ordinary joys and small pleasures.
She deserved to wake up every morning knowing she was safe, knowing the person sleeping beside her wanted to protect her rather than harm her.
Instead, she got 72 hours of honeymoon before being drugged, buried alive, and cremated by a man who had never seen her as human at all.
Who had studied her for months like a scientist studies a specimen.
who had documented her vulnerabilities in a notebook as if planning a business acquisition rather than a murder.
But Rachel Morrison, even in death, matters.
Her life mattered to her students, who still remember the teacher who made them feel valued.
Her life mattered to Emma, who carries forward her mother’s legacy of kindness and determination.
Her life mattered to her community, who lost someone who made ordinary days better through her presence.
And her death mattered because it stopped Alan Parker.
Because it exposed his crimes, because it led to justice for six other families, because it changed policies that protect others.
This is the story of an elementary school teacher from Portland, Oregon, who thought she had found love again after tragedy.
Who trusted a man who seemed kind and normal and safe, who died on her honeymoon, not knowing that her death would be the one that finally brought down a serial killer who had evaded justice for 15 years.
This is the story of how a 12-year-old girl’s observation about missing jewelry led to one of the most important serial killer captures in recent history.
This is the story of how sometimes the smallest details solve the biggest cases.
How sometimes justice comes from paying attention when something doesn’t quite fit.
How sometimes the courage to ask questions and demand truth can save lives.
Rachel Morrison was killed because Alan Parker wanted her money.
But she is remembered because of who she was as a person, as a teacher, as a mother, as a friend, as someone who made the world better through daily acts of kindness and compassion.
Her legacy is not how she died, but how she lived.
And how even in death she managed to save others by being the victim who finally exposed a monster who had been hiding among us all along.
Wearing the mask of normaly pretending to be one of us using our own values of community and trust and second chances as weapons against us.
The emerald ring that started this investigation.
The ring that Alan Parker wore around his neck, thinking it was a trophy of another successful kill became instead the evidence that destroyed him.
Sometimes the smallest things matter most.
Sometimes paying attention saves lives.
Sometimes asking uncomfortable questions is the most important thing you can do.
And sometimes a mother’s love, even from beyond the grave, can still protect others through the careful observation of a daughter who knew something was wrong and refused to look way.
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