The location turned out to be on the city’s outskirts, where a long row of metal garage doors stood largely unchanged since the 1970s. The area felt forgotten by time, quiet and isolated.
She located door 122, inserted the brass key, and lifted the rolling door upward. The smell of old paper and cedar rushed out, evidence of decades spent sealed away from fresh air and light.
In the center of the concrete floor sat a large wooden chest covered in layers of dust and cobwebs. Clearly no one had disturbed this space in many years.
Opening the Past
Rosa wiped the chest’s lid clean and opened it slowly, uncertain what she might find inside. The contents took her breath away with their emotional weight and careful preservation.
Children’s drawings tied with faded ribbons filled one section. Birthday cards addressed to Harold in childish handwriting suggested a relationship she knew nothing about. School certificates and achievement awards documented years of growth and accomplishment.
Dozens of letters, carefully saved and organized, filled much of the remaining space. Each one ended with the same signature: Virginia.
At the chest’s bottom, Rosa found a worn folder containing official documents. Reading through them revealed that sixty-five years earlier, Harold had quietly assumed responsibility for a young woman and her newborn daughter.
A Terrible Assumption
The papers showed Harold had paid their rent, covered educational expenses, and sent monthly support for years. Every letter the woman wrote thanking him had been preserved with obvious care.
Rosa’s mind jumped to the most painful conclusion. Harold had maintained another family throughout their marriage. The man she thought she knew completely had lived a double life for decades.
She sat down on the cold garage floor, overwhelmed by betrayal and confusion. How could he have hidden something so enormous? Why had he waited until after leaving this world to reveal it?
Her whispered words to Harold’s memory carried hurt and bewilderment in equal measure.
The Messenger Returns
Gravel crunched outside the garage door. Rosa looked up to find the young girl from the funeral standing in the doorway, bicycle beside her.
The child explained she had thought Rosa might come to this location. When Harold gave her the envelope, he had emphasized this was the most important task she would ever perform.
Rosa studied the girl more carefully now, noting her features and the intelligence in her eyes. She asked for the child’s name and learned it was Gini, short for Virginia.
The name hit Rosa like a physical blow. This child shared a name with the woman whose letters filled the chest. The connection seemed obvious, yet raised even more questions.
A Desperate Situation
Rosa asked if Gini could take her to meet Virginia. The girl hesitated before explaining that her mother was currently hospitalized, facing necessary heart surgery the family couldn’t afford.
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