I didn’t pack neatly. I didn’t even think.
I shoved everything into bags with numb hands, heart hammering.
I left the photo albums, but I took his old flannel shirt. It still smelled like him.
That night, in a cheap motel, I stared at the ceiling, wide awake. Everything felt wrong.
My Dad wouldn’t have done this.
Something wasn’t right. And I was going to find out what.
***
Three days later, I still hadn’t unpacked. I barely ate.
I barely moved. But then I remembered something, a book.
Our Hiking Adventures, a weathered hardcover my Dad gave me for my fifteenth birthday, where we wrote down every trail we ever explored together.
It was still at the house. I had to get it. I had just stepped out of the motel when I noticed someone across the street.
A man in a hoodie, standing too still.
He moved toward me, fast but not threatening. Just…intentional. When he reached me, he didn’t speak.
He looked into my eyes, then placed something in my hands, and turned away without a word.
But the stranger was already disappearing around the corner.
My heart pounded as I unrolled the paper. It was old and creased, hand-drawn with familiar lines. A map.
As I opened it fully, something fluttered out and landed on the ground.
A small folded note. I picked it up with trembling fingers.
It was my father’s handwriting. I would know it anywhere.
He meant me.
No one else had been near him on his last day. Just me.
I turned back to the map. The drawing wasn’t perfect, but I recognized the lines of the lake and the dense green around it.
And in the trees, a small sketch of our old summer cabin. A red X sat beside it. My eyes scanned further.
There were two more Xs, both deeper into the woods. And suddenly I remembered: the bonfires we made, the smoke in Dad’s flannel shirt, the smell of fish frying on the old pan.
That cabin had been ours. One summer, he carved our initials into the porch beam.
I was ten. I made him promise we’d go back every year. We hadn’t.
But at that moment, something was waiting for me there.
First, though, I needed to stop by the house. I drove over just as the sun dipped low. My mother opened the door with that same smirk she wore at the funeral.
“I left a book,” I replied.
I found the journal upstairs, wedged behind the nightstand.
I flipped it open and smiled, tiny checkmarks, messy notes from our trips, even a pressed leaf. On my way out, I didn’t even look at her.
“You know,” she called after me, “whatever fantasy you’re chasing… he still left you nothing.”
I paused at the door.
“You don’t deserve anything of this,” I said quietly as I stepped outside.
Back at the motel, I packed water, a flashlight, gloves, and Dad’s compass.
I set an alarm for dawn.
But when I woke up and reached for the map, it was gone. I tore the room apart. Emptied drawers.
Checked under the bed. Nothing. Someone had stolen it.
I sat still, shaking.
Then I opened the journal again, flipped to a drawing of the lake I’d sketched years ago.
I closed my eyes and let memory take over: the narrow dirt road, the way the trail curved left after the split oak, the creek crossing before the hill. I didn’t need the map.
I could find that cabin on my own.
The road ended in gravel and pine needles. From there, I had to go on foot. I slipped on my backpack, locked the car, and stepped into the forest.
The trail was fainter than I remembered.
Trees had grown closer together. Moss clung to fallen logs like skin.
But the quiet helped.
Each step reminded me of who I was with my father — calm, determined, capable.
Still, something itched at the back of my neck. I kept glancing behind me, but the path was empty. Just trees and wind.
But the feeling wouldn’t leave.
By the time I reached the cabin, dusk had fallen again. The sky turned lilac, and the forest deepened into shadow. I froze at the clearing.
The front door hung open, and the lock was broken.
I stepped inside cautiously.
Everything was overturned, drawers open, chairs knocked over, floorboards scratched. They’d been searching.
Outside, a creak. I slipped back into the yard, eyes darting.
The old toolshed stood slightly ajar. I approached slowly, heart hammering. I pushed the door open.
Inside, hunched over a wooden crate, were my mother and her son.
I stepped closer.
They jumped. My mother’s face twisted in surprise, then anger.
“We were following the map,” she snapped. “It led here.”
I glared at her.
Matthew shrugged.
“You were gonna waste it. We figured we’d get here first.”
“Get what?” I asked. “What are you even looking for?
You already took everything.”
“We just want what’s fair. If your father left something hidden, it belongs to us too.”
“No,” I said, shaking. “He left you what he wanted to leave you.
Everything else, he meant for me. He made that clear.”
Matthew knelt beside the crate. “I think I found it,” he said, tugging the lid open.
We all leaned closer.
Inside sat… a pair of gardening gloves and an old, rusted shovel. A note on the lid read:
Matthew let out a dry laugh.
My mother scoffed. “You can keep your stupid tools.
Maybe he really didn’t love you after all.”
They tossed the map at my feet and walked out. I stayed. I stared at the gloves, the shovel, the old cabin walls.
Then I remembered something.
Another X on the map. The clearing by the creek. The place where Dad and I planted a sapling one summer, just the two of us.
He let me pick the spot.
He’d said, One day, it’ll be taller than you. That’s how you’ll know we did something right.
My throat tightened.
I grabbed the shovel. Slipped on the gloves. And walked.
The tree was still there, tall now, proud, its roots reaching wide into the earth.
I walked around it slowly, heart pounding, then found the spot where the soil had a different color. Softer. I dug.
The first few inches came away easily.
Then the shovel hit something solid. Metal. A box.
Inside was a sealed envelope and a flash drive.
I opened the letter first.
I clutched the letter to my chest, knees in the dirt, tears spilling freely now.
He hadn’t betrayed me. He never would.
I didn’t call the lawyer right away. Not yet.
That could wait until morning.
That night, I stayed in the cabin. Our cabin. I found one of Dad’s old sleeping bags, still folded in the corner, and unrolled it by the fireplace.
The air smelled like pine and dust. I lay there in the quiet, listening to the trees creak gently outside and the soft rhythm of crickets through the broken window. It wasn’t warm.
It wasn’t comfortable.
But it was ours.
Finally, I knew the truth, his and mine. And that was enough. For that moment.
The rest, they’d learn soon enough.
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