When my grandmother passed away, I inherited her house—and with it, a note containing just five chilling words: “Burn everything in the attic.” I ignored the warning. And what I discovered up there shattered everything I thought I knew about my family. I had always assumed I’d end up alone someday.
But I never imagined it would happen so quickly. One moment she was here, and then—just like that—Grandma Elinor was gone. My mother had died when I was ten, and my father was a complete mystery.
But Grandma had been my world. For her last six months, I never left her side in the hospital—day or night. After the funeral, I found myself sitting in the lawyer’s office to hear her will.
“She left you her home—completely yours, no debts,” he said, before pulling something else from a drawer. “She also left this letter for you.”
I unfolded the note. The ink was slightly smudged, but the words were clear:
“Marie, if you’re reading this, it means I didn’t make it back home.
Burn everything in the attic. Don’t look. Don’t open anything.
Just burn it. It’s important. I love you.
Grandma.”
I stared at it. “She wants me to burn the attic?”
The lawyer shrugged. “This isn’t a legal condition—just a personal request.”
I left and walked for nearly an hour before finally reaching the house.
It greeted me with a heavy, uncomfortable silence. My eyes went straight to the hatch in the hallway ceiling—the attic. The one Grandma warned me about.
With a faint, nervous smile, I muttered, “Feels like I’m in some strange movie.”
I pulled down the ladder, climbed up, and pushed open the hatch. Dust hit me instantly, making me sneeze. Whatever she had wanted to protect me from, I was about to see it for myself.
“I’m sorry, Grandma…”
I had no idea then that I was making the worst mistake of my life. I spent far longer up there than I’d intended—hours, actually—digging through boxes filled with fragments of her life. Old birthday cards I had made for her as a child.
Hairpins. Buttons in tiny jars. A broken clock.
A photo album that smelled of time and memories. Tears rolled down my cheeks as I whispered, “Why did you want me to burn this? This is you… this is us.”
Her voice echoed in my mind, remembering the time she’d saved a cake decoration from the day I accidentally swapped salt for sugar, and another memory of her giving me mittens she had knitted for my mother when she was my age.
It was all love—until I found the chest. Old, heavy, and locked with a rusted clasp. I had never seen inside it before.
Then I remembered the small jewelry box she always kept by her bed. I rushed downstairs, opened the drawer, and found it—along with a tiny, rusted key. I climbed back up, slid the key into the lock, and opened the chest.
Inside were yellowed envelopes tied with twine, faded photographs, and stacks of papers. One photo stopped me cold—it was me as a little girl, holding the hand of a man I didn’t recognize. On the back, it read: “My son and my granddaughter.
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