Starting on my eighth birthday, Grandpa Henry began giving me the same strange gift every year — a single green plastic soldier, wrapped in old newspaper, no card, no explanation. “Every army needs a leader,” he’d say with a twinkle in his eye, but never more than that. By the time I was twenty-six, I had eighteen soldiers lined up on my shelf. I thought it was just one of his quirks — until he passed away.
One afternoon, my sister picked one up, flipped it over, and froze. “You’ve never noticed this?” Each soldier had a tiny number and year etched into its base. When we arranged them in order, they formed GPS coordinates. The location led me to a quiet wooded area outside our hometown, where one of Grandpa’s old friends was waiting.
He handed me a set of keys and pointed me down a hidden path. At the end stood a small ivy-covered cottage Grandpa had secretly built for me. Inside was an entire world of puzzles — riddles on the walls, locked boxes, ciphers, and treasures from his life: letters to my grandma, old photos, and even recordings of his voice.
His final letter read: “You solved my favorite mystery. This place is yours now — use it well, and if you want, share it with the world.” I quit my job, moved back home, and turned the cottage into The Soldier’s Trail, a real-life puzzle adventure using Grandpa’s original designs. It became a place for joy, curiosity, and connection. And every year on my birthday, I still add one green soldier — for Grandpa, for the mystery, and for love.