When my father passed away, the world seemed to shift under my feet. Grief has a strange habit of stealing time, stretching some moments unbearably long while compressing others into blinks. For weeks, I walked through my days as if moving underwater: slow, heavy, unreal.
Despite everything, I believed I knew precisely what my father had left behind. He owned our small family home, a modest savings account, and a collection of old fishing gear he considered priceless for sentimental reasons. Nothing complicated.
Nothing mysterious. But during the reading of his will, I discovered how wrong I was. The attorney cleared his throat, flipping through the final pages.
“And lastly,” he said, looking over his glasses, “your father leaves to you a property located on Willow Bend Road.”
I blinked. “A property? As in a house?”
“Yes.
A two-story residence and its land.”
“That must be a mistake,” I said automatically. “My father didn’t own anything else.”
The attorney shook his head. “It’s in his name.
He purchased it twenty-seven years ago.”
My stomach clenched. Twenty-seven years ago, long before my mother left us, long before I was even old enough to remember much of anything. “Why… why wouldn’t he ever tell me?” I whispered.
No one in the room had an answer. The very next Saturday, I drove to Willow Bend Road. It was an hour south of where I lived, tucked into a quiet stretch of countryside where tall maples lined the road like watchful sentinels.
The further I drove, the more uneasy I felt. My father had never been a secretive man, stern, sometimes quiet, but honest almost to a fault. What could he possibly hide that required an entire house to be kept off the record of our lives?
The property matched the address: a white-painted house with fading blue shutters, surrounded by an overgrown yard. It didn’t look abandoned, though. The lawn was freshly cut.
Wind chimes tinkled softly on the porch. A pair of flowerpots, alive, thriving, sat on either side of the welcome mat. Someone lived here.
I stepped out of my car, the gravel crunching under my shoes. I walked up to the door, hesitated, and knocked. A moment later, it opened.
A woman stood there. She was somewhere in her early sixties, with silver-streaked hair pulled back into a loose bun and gentle eyes that studied me with a mixture of confusion and apprehension. She wore a faded red cardigan and held a dish towel in her hands as though I’d interrupted her mid-chore.
“Yes?” she said cautiously. “Hi,” I managed. “My name is— I’m… my father was the owner of this house.”
Something flickered across her face, a tiny, almost imperceptible jolt of recognition.
She exhaled slowly. “You must be his daughter.”
The way she said it, soft, resigned, sent a shiver up my spine. “Yes,” I said.
“And you are…?”
“My name is Margaret.” She paused, gripping the dish towel. “I suppose you’d better come inside.”
The house was clean, warm, and lived-in. Sunlight streamed through the windows onto polished wooden floors.
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