50 HOURS OF SILENCE: What happened inside 131 Edgemoor Avenue? 🏠🌑
The neighbors saw the lights go on and off. They saw the Prius in the driveway. But inside, the clock had already stopped for Kai and Ella.
Medical examiners have just dropped a bombshell: the MacAusland children were dead for nearly TWO DAYS before Janette fled to Vermont. That’s 50 hours of a mother living, breathing, and moving through a house that had become a tomb. What was she doing in that window of time? Did she sit at the kitchen table? Did she sleep? More importantly, why didn’t the high-tech security system or the father, Samuel, notice the sudden, deathly silence of a home that used to be filled with laughter?
The “Blackout Timeline” is revealing chilling details about the “last meal” and a mysterious 3:00 AM departure that the police are struggling to explain.
The basement discovery and the 50-hour log are leaked. Read the full timeline now. 👇🔥

In the manicured suburb of Wellesley, silence is usually a sign of peace. But for 50 agonizing hours last week, the silence at 131 Edgemoor Avenue was the sound of a nightmare hiding in plain sight.
As Janette MacAusland, 49, sits in a Vermont jail cell, a chilling forensic reality is emerging that has sent shockwaves through the true crime community and left investigators baffled. The question isn’t just why she did it, but what happened during the two days she spent living inside a morgue of her own making.
The “Ghost” in the House
According to preliminary forensic reports leaked to local outlets and discussed feverishly on Reddit’s r/TrueCrime, Kai (7) and Ella (6) are believed to have been killed as early as Wednesday evening. Yet, Janette didn’t emerge in Bennington, Vermont, until Friday night.
“We are looking at a 50-hour window where life seemingly went on as usual from the outside,” says a source close to the investigation. Neighbors reported seeing the lights in the master bedroom cycle through their usual evening routine. The mail was collected. The trash bins were moved.
How does a mother strangle her two children and then proceed to exist alongside their bodies for over two days?
The “Information Gap” on Edgemoor Ave
The internet has been quick to point out the glaring inconsistencies. On X (formerly Twitter), amateur sleuths are dissecting the “well-being check” that eventually led to the discovery. If Janette was in a state of “divorce-induced psychosis,” as some suggest, how did she manage the calculated calm required to stay in that house for 50 hours?
“You don’t just ‘forget’ you killed your kids for two days,” one popular Discord moderator posted. “She was waiting for something. Or she was finishing something.”
The chilling theory gaining traction is the “Final Ritual” theory. During her brief court appearance in Vermont, Janette mentioned wanting to “go to God together.” This has led many to believe the 50-hour gap was a failed attempt at a triple suicide, where she spent days “preparing” herself to follow her children, only to lose her nerve at the last second and flee across state lines.
The Role of Samuel MacAusland
The blackout also shines a harsh light on the children’s father, Samuel MacAusland. While no evidence suggests he was involved, the digital community is asking: How did he not know?
In a high-stakes custody battle involving a 9,000-square-foot home and a flurry of legal filings, the lack of communication over a 50-hour period is being called “highly unusual” by domestic law experts. Was there a court-ordered “silent period”? Or was the breakdown in communication so severe that 131 Edgemoor Avenue had effectively become two different worlds?
The Vermont Flight
The silence ended only when Janette arrived at her aunt’s home in Bennington, bleeding from the neck. The 130-mile drive through the winding backroads of New England was her first contact with the outside world in over two days. Police found her Prius “orderly,” with no signs of the chaos that had transpired in the Wellesley basement.
As the extradition process begins, the focus remains on that 50-hour void. Did she talk to them? Did she pray over them? Or was she simply watching the clock, waiting for a “sign from God” that never came?
The unsealed 911 transcripts from the Vermont aunt’s house are expected to be released Tuesday. For a community grieving two innocent lives, the truth behind those 50 hours might be more terrifying than the crime itself.
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