For more than five decades of marriage, I believed that my wife Martha and I had shared every meaningful part of our lives. We had grown older together inside the same quiet house in Vermont, a home that had witnessed the laughter of our three children and later the joyful chaos of grandchildren visiting on weekends and holidays. The rooms held memories layered upon memories: birthday celebrations around the kitchen table, winter evenings by the fireplace, and countless ordinary moments that gradually formed the story of our family. Yet despite all those years of closeness, there was one small mystery that remained untouched.
From the day we first moved into the house, Martha had always kept the attic locked. Whenever I asked about it in the early years, she explained that it contained old furniture and boxes that once belonged to her parents. She said they were dusty, unimportant things that had simply been stored away and forgotten. Her explanation sounded reasonable, and because I trusted her completely, I never pushed the matter further. Over time the locked attic became just another part of the house’s quiet routine, like a door that was rarely opened or a drawer that held forgotten objects. Years passed, and the mystery faded into the background of daily life.