My life was finally stable—a successful business, a peaceful routine—until a mysterious package arrived one rainy Tuesday. Inside was a photo of a baby with my exact birthmark, an image of an overgrown house labeled “Willow Creek,” and a letter saying the box had been left with me at the orphanage but only recently discovered.
I grew up in foster care, with no real roots. That box cracked open a past I’d long buried. I became obsessed with finding the house. Years later, an investigator found it—remote, crumbling, but identical to the photo.
Inside, I found a cradle, a faded photo of a woman holding a baby, and a letter: “I’m sick. I hope you find a better life. I love you.”
I wept.
I restored the house. Kept the cradle. Framed the photo.
And for the first time ever, I felt it: I belonged. That house became my history—my beginning.