The initial investigation at the scene pointed toward a tragic accident—a faulty furnace in an old workshop. However, Detective Sarah Vance noticed a discrepancy that didn’t fit the "accident" narrative: the workshop's ventilation system hadn't just failed; it had been surgically disabled from the outside.
The breakthrough came when Vance analyzed the workshop's digital thermostat. It had been hacked. Not by a sophisticated cyber-criminal, but through a simple, pre-programmed script embedded in a smart home device gifted to Arthur weeks earlier. An Unexpected Killer
The list of suspects was thin. Arthur was a man of habit, beloved by his neighbors and respected by his few remaining peers. His only living relative, a nephew named Julian, stood to inherit a modest estate, but Julian was halfway across the country at the time of death, verified by airport security footage and hotel logs. The initial investigation at the scene pointed toward
In Eldridge, the clocks kept ticking, but the town now knew that the most familiar things in their homes could be the most dangerous of all. If you’d like to expand on this, let me know: Should we focus more on the ? It had been hacked
In the quiet, well-manicured suburb of Eldridge, the most dangerous thing was usually a stray lawnmower. That changed on a Tuesday in October.
The trail led back to a local tech start-up, where a disgruntled former engineer had used Arthur’s home as a test bed for a "silent exit" software he’d developed. He hadn't even known Arthur; the retired clockmaker was simply a random IP address on a list, an accidental casualty in a digital vendetta against a former employer.