I married Thomas when I was 19.
We were kids with nothing but a small apartment, some wobbly secondhand chairs, and dreams that far outpaced our checking account.
We built our life one brick at a time: buying a house, saving for retirement, and following all the other boring but necessary steps to build a solid, stable life.
I prided myself on having an honest marriage.
I was a fool.
I prided myself on having an honest marriage.
Thirty-nine years later, I stood in the rain and watched them lower Thomas into the dirt.
“A heart attack,” the doctors said. They told me it was quick.
“At least he didn’t suffer,” they whispered at the wake.
I just nodded. People say that like it provides some kind of cushion for the fall, but it doesn’t.
Grief is a quiet thing after four decades. It doesn’t scream. It just reminds you that the space across the table is now a permanent vacancy.
Thomas wasn’t a man of secrets. At least, that was the story I told myself for half my life.
I stood in the rain and watched them lower Thomas into the dirt.
Thomas was open, kind, and predictable. But there was one exception.
At the end of our hallway sat a closet. He kept it locked. Always.
Whenever I asked what was inside there, he’d say, “Just old paperwork, Margaret. Nothing interesting.”
I believed him. When you’re married that long, you trade certain curiosities for peace. You stop poking at small mysteries because you trust the man holding the key.
But once Thomas was gone, I couldn’t ignore that locked door any longer.
I believed him.
After the funeral, I sorted through his sweaters and folded his Sunday shirts.
Every time I walked toward the bedroom, that locked door at the end of the hall seemed to grow heavier.
At first, I told myself it was disrespectful to look. Whatever he kept in there belonged to him, and if he wanted it buried, I should let it stay dead.
But I couldn’t.
On the tenth day of being a widow, I picked up the phone and called a locksmith.
That locked door at the end of the hall seemed to grow heavier.
When the locksmith arrived, a young man with a heavy tool belt and a bored expression, I stood back and watched.
The metallic click of the lock finally giving way echoed through the narrow hall.
The door creaked as it swung open. The air inside was thick with the scent of dust and yellowing paper.
No skeletons were hanging from hooks. There were just stacks of boxes and a heavy metal strongbox sitting on a shelf.
The metallic click of the lock finally giving way echoed through the narrow hall.
“You want me to pop this one too?” the locksmith asked, pointing at the strongbox.
“Please.”
I sat on the floor and pulled the first cardboard box toward me while the locksmith got to work on the strongbox. Inside, I found bundles of letters tied together with rough twine. They looked decades old.
I pulled one out and read the first few lines.
In that heartbeat, I realized I should have forced the issue while he was alive, or never opened that closet at all.
The locksmith got to work on the strongbox.
Tom, the check came yesterday. Thank you. I didn’t know how I was going to cover the cleats and the league fee both this month. He doesn’t know where the money comes from. I told him it’s from an old friend of his father’s. I hope that’s all right. He asks about you sometimes. — M
My skin felt cold. I opened the next one.
Tom, you don’t have to keep doing this. I know what it costs you to send it. But if you’re going to keep helping, we need to talk about how long we’re going to keep the truth from him. He’s not a little boy anymore. He deserves to know who you are to him. — Marilyn
There it was.
We need to talk about how long we’re going to keep the truth from him.
Thirty-nine years of marriage, and the only conclusion I could reach was that Thomas had a secret child — a whole life I wasn’t invited to see.
“I was 19 when I married you,” I muttered to the hallway. “When did you even find the time?”
I shuffled through more envelopes until I saw a return address that made me stop breathing for a second.
It was from a State Correctional Facility.
I tore it open, and the mystery got stranger.
“When did you even find the time?”
Tommy, you shouldn’t be writing to me. Mom and Dad changed your name and moved you away to protect you from what I did, don’t you get that?
I blinked. What was I reading?
“Almost there,” the locksmith called out.
I nodded absently and kept reading.
I’m glad you reached out, though. It gives me a chance to apologize. I should’ve been a better role model for you, Tommy. If I could go back, I’d be a better big brother — Steve
Big brother? Thomas always told me he was an only child. How many layers of lies were stashed in this closet?
Mom and Dad changed your name and moved you away.
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