For 52 years, my wife kept the attic locked.
When I finally broke that lock, I discovered a truth about our family that changed everything I thought I knew.
My name is Gerry. I’m 76 years old.
My wife Martha and I have been married for 52 years. We raised three kids together and now have seven grandchildren who fill our house with noise every time they visit.
For most of my life, I believed I understood my wife completely.
Turns out I didn’t.
Our house in Vermont is one of those old Victorian places that creaks whenever the wind blows. We bought it back in 1972 when our children were still small.
Since the day we moved in, one door in that house has always stayed locked.
The attic dfk.
Every time I asked Martha about it, she gave the same answer.
“Just old junk, Gerry. Furniture from my parents’ place.”
So I left it alone.
For more than five decades.
Two weeks ago Martha slipped in the kitchen and broke her hip while baking a pie for our grandson’s birthday. The doctors said she’d need surgery and several weeks of rehab.
For the first time in years, I was alone in the house.
That’s when I started hearing the noise.
Late in the evenings, something upstairs made a slow scratching sound. Not like mice. Not like squirrels.
Heavier.
Like something being dragged across the floor.
After a few nights of listening to it, curiosity finally got the better of me.
I took Martha’s key ring from the kitchen drawer and climbed the stairs. I tried every key on that ring.
None of them opened the attic door.
That bothered me more than the noise itself.
Martha kept keys for everything on that ring.
Except the attic.
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