My son came home with a boy I’d never seen before. They slipped upstairs quickly. I called out to ask who it was, but my son just yelled back, “A friend!” As I approached the room, I overheard the boy say, “Your mom shouldn’t know about this.” Alarmed, I opened the door to find them huddled on the bed with a cardboard box.
Inside was a stack of old photos, a few crumpled bills, and what looked like a worn-out journal. My first instinct was to be angry—who was this kid, and why was he telling my son to keep secrets? But as I stepped closer, I saw the look on both their faces.
It wasn’t fear or guilt. It was something else. A mix of sadness and curiosity.
The boy looked up at me and mumbled, “I’m sorry, ma’am. We didn’t mean to sneak around. It’s just… I found this in my grandpa’s attic.
My mom doesn’t know I took it.”
My son, Marcus, added quietly, “Mom, this is Ian. His grandpa lived across from the old train tracks, you know, the house that’s been empty for months. He passed away last year.
Ian’s mom has been cleaning it out.”
I sat down on the edge of the bed. “Okay. So what’s in the box that’s so secret?”
Ian hesitated, then gently lifted the journal.
“It’s my grandpa’s. But it’s not about him. It’s about… someone named Charlie.
And a promise he never kept. I think my grandpa felt guilty.”
The name Charlie meant nothing to me, but Ian’s tone made me pause. There was something heavy in his voice.
He opened the journal and pointed to the first page. In shaky handwriting, it read:
“May 3rd, 1971. I should’ve gone back for him.”
Ian flipped through pages filled with scribbled notes, old maps, and what looked like directions to places around town.
There were mentions of a red bicycle, a baseball glove, and a treehouse behind the Miller farm. Places that hadn’t existed for decades. I looked at the boys.
“Do your parents know you have this?”
Ian shook his head. “My mom would throw it away. She says Grandpa was losing it at the end.
But I don’t think so. I think he was trying to tell someone the truth.”
It was quiet for a moment. Then Marcus said, “We want to figure it out, Mom.
Who Charlie was. What happened. We thought maybe you could help.”
And just like that, I was part of a mystery.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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