The Isotope Trap
The foyer of the Sterling Manor was designed to intimidate. Marble floors, Corinthian columns, and a crystal chandelier that looked like a frozen explosion.
I stood in the center of the room, flanked by two uniformed police officers. My stepmother, Victoria, stood on the grand staircase, looking like a tragic heroine in her black silk dressing gown. She was weeping. It was a good performance. If I didn’t know her, I might have believed her.
“She took it!” Victoria sobbed, pointing a manicured finger at me. “The Midnight Star. My late husband’s gift to me! I saw her lurking in my boudoir this morning. She’s always been jealous. She’s always wanted my things!”
My name is Elena Sterling. I am twenty-six years old. I have a PhD in Chemical Engineering from MIT. I do not want her things. I want her out of my father’s house.
“Miss Sterling,” the older officer said, his voice tired. “We need to search your bag.”
I handed him my backpack. “Go ahead.”
Victoria smirked through her tears. She was sure. She was absolutely certain they would find the necklace. Why? Because she had planted it there. Or at least, she thought she had.
Earlier that morning, I had seen her slipping into my room while I was in the shower. I hadn’t confronted her. I had let the trap set itself.
The officer opened my bag. He dumped the contents onto the marble table. A laptop. A notebook. A granola bar. A spare charger.
No necklace.
Victoria’s sobbing stopped abruptly. She blinked. “Check the side pocket! Check the lining! She’s crafty!”
The officer patted down the bag. He turned it inside out.
“It’s empty, Ma’am,” the officer said.
“That’s impossible!” Victoria shrieked, descending the stairs. “She must have hidden it on her person! Search her!”
“Victoria,” I said. My voice was calm. Clinical. It was the voice I used when presenting a thesis defense. “You seem very invested in the location of a necklace you claim is lost.”
“Stolen!” she corrected, her eyes narrowing. “You stole it, and you hid it! Officer, arrest her! She’s a thief and a liar!”
I looked at the officers.
“May I reach into my pocket?” I asked.
The officers tensed, hands hovering near their belts.
“It’s not a weapon,” I said slowly. “It’s a scanner.”
Chapter 1: The Setup
I pulled out a device. It looked like a bulky Geiger counter, a handheld unit with a digital display and a sensor wand.
“What is that?” Victoria scoffed. “A toy?”
“It’s a forensic isotope detector,” I explained. “Model X-90. Used for tracing industrial leaks and… high-security asset recovery.”
I turned the device on. It let out a low, rhythmic click… click… click…
“Three days ago,” I addressed the room, “I noticed that several items of my late father’s estate had gone missing. A watch here. A cufflink there. Small things. Easy to pawn.”
I looked at Victoria. Her jaw tightened.
“I suspected,” I continued, “that someone in this house was liquidating the estate before probate closed. So, I took precautions. I treated the remaining high-value items—including the Midnight Star necklace—with a synthetic forensic isotope.”
“A what?” the officer asked, intrigued.
“It’s an invisible, odorless, harmless chemical marker,” I said. “It transfers on contact. If you touch the necklace, the isotope transfers to your skin. To your clothes. To anything you touch. It doesn’t wash off with soap. It lasts for forty-eight hours.”
Victoria laughed. It was a high, nervous sound. “You’re bluffing. You’re making up science words to confuse the police.”
“Am I?” I asked.
I held the wand over my own hands.
Click… click… click.
Silence. The screen remained green.
“As you can see,” I said. “I haven’t touched the necklace in three days. If I had stolen it this morning, as you claim, my hands would be lighting this machine up like a Christmas tree.”
I took a step toward Victoria.
“Now,” I said. “Let’s see who has touched it.”
Chapter 2: The Search
Victoria took a step back. “Get that thing away from me! I don’t consent to this!”
“Mrs. Sterling,” the officer stepped in. “If you are the victim, and you haven’t touched the necklace since you last saw it in the safe… surely you have nothing to worry about? You said you opened the safe and it was gone.”
“I… well, yes,” she stammered. “But radiation! Is it dangerous?”
“It’s harmless,” I lied. (It was harmless, but I enjoyed seeing her sweat). “Unless you’re guilty. Then it burns.”
I swept the wand over the officer. Click… click. Nothing.
I walked toward the staircase.
“Stop her!” Victoria yelled.
I ignored her. I swept the wand over the air as I walked.
I reached the bottom of the stairs where Victoria was standing.
Click… click… CLICK-CLICK-CLICK.
The sound accelerated. The rhythm became frantic. The screen turned yellow.
“Interesting,” I said. “The machine detects trace amounts on your dressing gown, Victoria.”
“I… I held it yesterday!” she cried. “To clean it!”
“You said it was in the safe for a week,” the officer noted, consulting his notepad. “You told dispatch you hadn’t opened the safe in seven days.”
Victoria’s face went pale. “I… I misremembered.”
“Let’s find the source,” I said.
I walked past her, up the stairs. The clicking got faster. It was like a heartbeat racing.
CLICK-CLICK-CLICK-CLICK.
I walked down the hallway. Victoria ran after me. “You can’t go in my room! That’s private!”
“Probable cause,” the officer said, following close behind. “Ma’am, step aside.”
I entered the master bedroom. The clicking was a continuous drone now. It was loud. Urgent.
I scanned the room. The bed? No. The vanity? No.
I turned toward the walk-in closet.
SCREEEEEE.
The machine screamed. The display turned bright red. MAXIMUM DENSITY DETECTED.
I walked into the closet. Rows of designer clothes. Shoes. Bags.
I pointed the wand at a specific shelf. A shelf stacked with Hermès boxes.
“It’s here,” I said.
“Don’t touch those!” Victoria shrieked, trying to push past the officer. “Those are my private collection!”
The officer held her back. “Miss Sterling, please proceed.”
I moved the wand. It led me to a blue box on the top shelf.
I pulled it down.
I opened it.
Inside was not a scarf. Inside was a velvet pouch.
And inside the pouch, glittering under the closet lights, was the Midnight Star.
Chapter 3: The Truth
The silence in the room was heavy.
“Well,” the officer said, crossing his arms. “It seems the necklace wasn’t stolen after all.”
“She put it there!” Victoria yelled, her voice cracking. “She planted it! She’s trying to frame me!”
“Officer,” I said calmly. “Scan her hands.”
I handed the device to the policeman.
He approached Victoria. She tried to hide her hands behind her back.
“Ma’am, hands out,” he ordered.
She slowly extended her hands. They were shaking.
The officer passed the wand over her palms.
SCREEEEEEEEE.
The machine went wild.
“Now scan the inside of her pocket,” I suggested.
He scanned the pocket of her dressing gown.
SCREEEEEEEEE.
“And now,” I said, “scan the ‘stolen’ necklace.”
He scanned the jewelry.
SCREEEEEEEEE.
“It matches,” the officer said. “Same signature.”
I turned to Victoria.
“You took the necklace out of the safe,” I deduced. “You intended to hide it in my bag to get me arrested. But you got nervous. You heard me coming out of the bathroom. So you stashed it in your closet temporarily, planning to plant it later. But you called the police too early.”
“No!” she wept. “That’s a lie!”
“Is it?” I asked. “Because the isotope transfer pattern will show that you were the last person to handle it. And since you filed a police report claiming it was stolen…”
I looked at the officer.
“That’s filing a false police report,” the officer said. “And attempted fraud. And since the value of the item is over $100,000…”
“Grand larceny,” I finished. “Or at least, attempt to defraud the estate.”
Chapter 4: The Pawn Ticket
“Wait,” the second officer said. He was looking through the rest of the blue box where the necklace was found. “What is this?”
He pulled out a slip of paper.
It was a receipt. From a high-end pawn broker in the city. Dated yesterday.
“Item sold: Platinum Diamond Cufflinks. Value: $15,000.”
I recognized the description. They were my father’s favorite cufflinks.
“And this one,” the officer pulled out another slip. “Vintage Rolex. Sold last week. $25,000.”
Victoria stopped crying. She looked like a cornered animal.
“You were liquidating the assets,” I said. “You knew the will was going to be read next week. You knew Dad left the estate to me in trust, and you only got a stipend. So you were selling everything you could get your hands on before the lawyers did inventory.”
“It’s my house!” Victoria screamed. “I deserve it! I put up with that old man for ten years! I deserve more than a stipend!”
“He was my father,” I snapped, my composure finally cracking. “And you are a thief.”
The officer took out his handcuffs.
“Victoria Sterling,” he said. “You are under arrest for grand larceny, insurance fraud, and filing a false police report.”
“You can’t do this!” she wailed as they clicked the cuffs onto her wrists. “I’m a Sterling! I have status!”
“You have the right to remain silent,” the officer recited, spinning her around.
I watched as they led her out of the closet, past the rows of clothes she had bought with stolen money.
As she passed me, she lunged, trying to bite me. “You witch! You ruined everything!”
“I didn’t ruin anything, Victoria,” I said, holding up the isotope scanner. “I just turned on the light.”
Chapter 5: The Aftermath
They took her away in the back of a squad car. The neighbors watched. It was the most excitement the gated community had seen in years.
I stood in the driveway, holding the Midnight Star.
I went back inside. The house was quiet.
I walked to my father’s study. I sat at his desk.
I pulled out a bottle of acetone and a cloth. I began to gently clean the necklace.
The “isotope” wasn’t radioactive. It was a proprietary synthetic DNA marker fluid developed by my lab for anti-counterfeiting. It was harmless, but undeniable in court.
I had trapped her with science.
I looked at the empty spaces on the shelves where my father’s things used to be. I would get them back. The pawn tickets were evidence. The police would recover the items.
For the first time in years, the air in the mansion didn’t feel heavy. It felt clean.
I picked up the phone and dialed the family attorney.
“Mr. Henderson?” I said. “This is Elena. You can go ahead and change the locks. The tenant has been evicted.”