Linda’s mouth tightened, almost like she was annoyed I’d asked.
Then she said, calmly and coldly, “Your father was buried a year ago.”
The words didn’t land right.
Buried. A year ago.
The sentence made no sense, like someone had switched languages in the middle. My mind tried to reject it. I waited for the punchline. The correction. The cruel joke.
But Linda didn’t blink.
“We live here now,” she added. “So… you should go.”
My throat went dry.
“I—” I tried again. “Why didn’t anyone tell me?”
Linda’s lips curved slightly, not a smile—more like satisfaction.
“You were in prison,” she said. “What were we supposed to do? Send you a sympathy card?”
Behind her, the hallway looked changed. Different pictures on the walls. Different furniture visible beyond the entryway. None of my father’s things. No hunting coat hung by the door. No scuffed boots. No familiar smell of cedar and coffee and the lemon cleaner he used on weekends.
It was like my father had been erased.
And Linda was standing in the doorway guarding the eraser.
“I need to see him,” I said, voice cracking. “I need—”
“There’s nothing to see,” she replied. “It’s over.”
Then, before I could force another word out, she closed the door.
Not slammed.
Just closed—slow, deliberate—like she was ending a conversation she’d been tired of for a long time.
I stood there staring at the door, my hand still raised from knocking, like my body hadn’t caught up to what my life had just become.
A year.
My father had been dead for a year.
And I was finding out on a porch like a stranger.
I didn’t remember walking away.
I only remember the street tilting slightly, like the whole neighborhood had shifted on its foundation. I walked until my legs hurt, until my mind stopped trying to make the sentence “your father was buried a year ago” sound less final.
Eventually, I ended up at the only place that made sense.
The cemetery.
THE GRAVE THAT WASN’T THERE
The cemetery sat behind a row of tall pines, the kind that always look serious, like they were planted by people who believed in permanence. A wrought-iron gate creaked when I pushed it open.
I didn’t have flowers.
I didn’t have a plan.
I just needed a marker. A stone. Proof.
I walked toward the office building, but a voice stopped me before I got far.
“Hey.”
I turned.
An older man stood near the maintenance shed, wearing a faded jacket and work gloves. His posture was casual, but his eyes were alert.
He wasn’t smiling.
He wasn’t friendly.
He was watchful, like he’d seen grief turn into trouble before.
“You looking for someone?” he asked.
“My father,” I said. “I need to find his grave.”
The man studied me for a moment.
Then he shook his head—once.
“Don’t look,” he said quietly.
My heart sank.
“What do you mean don’t look?”
“He’s not here.”
I felt my stomach twist. “That’s not possible. My stepmother said—”
“I know what she said.” The man’s voice stayed low. “But he’s not here.”
I stared at him, confusion turning sharp.
“Who are you?”
The man sighed like he’d been waiting for this day.
“Name’s Harold,” he said. “I’m the groundskeeper. Been here twenty-three years.”
Then he reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a small manila envelope. The edges were worn, like it had been handled too many times.
He held it out.
“He told me to give you this,” Harold said. “If you ever came asking.”
My hands went numb.
“How would he—”
Harold’s gaze didn’t waver. “He planned.”
I took the envelope like it might burn my fingers.
It was heavier than paper should be.
Inside, I felt something hard.
A key.
I opened the flap with shaking hands. A folded letter slid out, along with a small plastic card and a metal key taped to it. On the card, written in unmistakable handwriting—the handwriting that used to label every toolbox and drawer in our garage—were three words:
UNIT 108 — WESTRIDGE STORAGE
My chest tightened so hard it hurt.
And then I saw the date on the letter.
Three months before my release.
My father had written it knowing I would be free soon.
He’d written it knowing he wouldn’t be alive to explain.
My vision blurred.
Harold cleared his throat. “Read it somewhere quiet,” he said. “He didn’t want… an audience.”