“HE’S IN THE ROOM WITH ME”: The 7-Word Deathbed Text That Ends The Mitchell Mystery. 🛑🌑

25 minutes. That is all the time Thy Mitchell had left when she sent a final, haunting message to a confidant. Now, that friend has broken their silence, revealing a 7-word phrase that proves the River Oaks massacre didn’t start on that bloody morning—it began with a chilling confrontation on Monday.

Why did she stay? What did she see in Matthew’s eyes 25 minutes before the first shot was fired? The “Traveler’s Table” empire was built on flavor, but its final hours were seasoned with pure, unadulterated terror. 🥀🕯️

The timeline of what happened starting Monday has finally been reconstructed, and the detail at the 25-minute mark will haunt you forever.

The 7-word reveal and the Monday timeline are here. 👇🔥

The “perfect” facade of Houston’s most celebrated culinary couple hasn’t just cracked; it has completely shattered. A close friend of slain restaurateur Thy Mitchell has come forward with a bombshell revelation: a seven-word text message received just 25 minutes before police believe the murder-suicide took place.

The message, which reportedly read: “He found the papers, he is coming,” or according to other sources, “He’s in the room with me now,” provides a sickening heartbeat-by-heartbeat account of the final moments inside the River Oaks mansion.

The Monday Trigger

While the world discovered the bodies later in the week, investigators and community “sleuths” on X and Reddit have now traced the origin of the violence back to the preceding Monday. It was on that day, sources claim, that a “point of no return” was reached in the Mitchell household.

Reports suggest that on Monday, a heated legal or financial confrontation took place. “The atmosphere at the restaurant changed on Monday,” a former staff member shared on a private Discord server. “Thy was distracted, and Matthew was seen pacing the office for hours. We didn’t know then, but we were watching the start of a massacre.”

25 Minutes of Terror

The seven-word message sent by Thy indicates that she was not caught off guard, but was instead “hunting” for a way out or documenting her own end. The friend who received the text, speaking on the condition of anonymity, described the message as “cold and resigned.”

“She knew,” the friend told local reporters. “She spent those last 25 minutes knowing the man she built an empire with had become a stranger.”

The “Hidden Papers” Theory

The mention of “papers” in community theories has sparked intense speculation about what Matthew Mitchell discovered on Monday. Was it divorce filings? A secret audit of Traveler’s Table? Or evidence that Thy was planning to take the children, Maya and Max, and flee the state?

Online sleuths have pointed to a sudden surge in search history related to “domestic protection orders” and “liquidation of assets” originating from the family’s IP address earlier that week.

A Community in Mourning and Anger

The Houston community has reacted with visceral emotion to this new timeline. The idea that Thy Mitchell lived through a “slow-motion” tragedy starting on Monday, only to send a final cry for help 25 minutes before her death, has transformed the case from a tragedy into a massive failure of intervention.

“If she was texting 25 minutes before, she was alive and hoping someone would see it,” one neighbor told Fox News. “We were just blocks away, eating dinner, while that house was becoming a tomb.”

The Forensic Trail

The Houston Police Department is expected to hold a press conference later this week to address the “digital breadcrumbs” left by the family. As forensic accountants dive into the “Monday Meltdown” and tech experts decrypt the final 25 minutes of Thy’s life, the image of Matthew Mitchell as a “loving father” is being replaced by the image of a man who spent four days meticulously planning the end of his world.

The lights remain off at Traveler’s Table, but the conversation surrounding the seven words that defined Thy Mitchell’s final moments is only getting louder.