wanted a faded piece of cardboard when other kids got gadgets and money? But she would always smile and say, “One day, you’ll understand.” I was 17 when she died, and the tradition ended. Twenty years later, at 37, I returned to my childhood home after my parents decided to sell it. While cleaning the attic, I found a dusty jar hidden behind an old trunk. Inside were all 17 postcards. My chest tightened as I picked one up, turned it over—and froze.
On the back wasn’t just a message—it was a riddle. I quickly checked the others. Every postcard had one, carefully written in her neat, slanted handwriting. How had I never noticed before? The first one I read said: “The place where the oak meets the stone—look beneath, and you won’t be alone.”
Shaking, I ran to the backyard, to the old oak tree with the cracked stone at its roots. I dug until my fingers hit something hard: a small rusted tin box. Inside were black-and-white photographs, a brass key, and a note in my grandmother’s handwriting: “For the day you’re ready to know the truth about who you are.” My heart raced. I flipped through the photos. None showed my parents.
Instead, they were of my grandmother with a group of strangers. In every photo, there was a man in the background—tall, sharp features, piercing eyes. And the shock hit me like lightning. He looked exactly like me. The key in the box was labeled with a single word: “Basement.” But the basement in my grandmother’s old house had been locked my entire life. I had never been inside. I swallowed hard, staring at the key in my trembling hand. Whatever was waiting down there was the truth she’d been saving for me all along.