Finally I went to the garage, grabbed a screwdriver, and forced the old lock open.
The door creaked loudly when it gave way.
The first thing that hit me was the smell — old dust, paper, and something metallic that made my stomach twist.
My flashlight beam moved across the room.
Boxes everywhere. Old furniture under sheets.
Exactly like Martha had always described.
But in the far corner sat an old oak trunk with another heavy lock.
That trunk hadn’t been mentioned.
The next day I visited Martha at the rehab center and casually asked about it.
The reaction on her face told me everything I needed to know.
Her hands started shaking.
“You didn’t open it, did you?” she whispered.
That night I couldn’t sleep.
Around midnight I went back upstairs with a pair of bolt cutters.
The lock snapped.
Inside the trunk were hundreds of letters tied together with faded ribbon.
The oldest ones were dated 1966 — the same year Martha and I got married.
All of them were written to her.
And all of them were signed by the same man.
Daniel.
One sentence appeared in letter after letter.
“I will come back for you and our son when the time is right.”
Our son.
The letters spoke about a boy named James.
My firstborn.
The boy I had raised.
The boy I believed was mine.
The next morning I confronted Martha.
Through tears she told me the truth.
Before she met me, she had been engaged to a young man named Daniel. He was drafted to Vietnam in 1966. Shortly after he left, she discovered she was pregnant.
Then news came that his plane had been shot down.
Everyone believed he was dead.
Two months later Martha and I met. Soon after, we married.
I had always believed James was born early.
In reality, he had been born exactly on time.
Daniel never died in Vietnam.
He survived as a prisoner of war and returned years later. When he found Martha again, she was already married with a family.
So he chose to stay away.
He watched from a distance instead.
For decades.
He lived quietly in our town, writing letters he never sent and asking Martha about James whenever they occasionally spoke.
When I finally tracked down his address, I learned something else.
Daniel had died three days earlier.
That same week.
Later, while going through the trunk again, I found something else he had left behind for James — a Purple Heart medal, a journal, and an old photograph of Daniel, Martha, and baby James.
When I showed the box to my son, his hands began to shake.
Then he told me something that nearly stopped my heart.
James had known the truth since he was sixteen.
Daniel had told him after a baseball game one evening.
But James promised to keep the secret because Daniel believed revealing it would destroy our family.
Last Sunday James hugged me before leaving for home.
“You might not be my biological father,” he said quietly, “but you’re the only dad I’ve ever had.”
At 76 years old, I’m still trying to understand everything that happened.
But one thing I know for certain.
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