When my mother died, I thought I knew everything about her. Every scar, every story, every silence. But I was wrong. What I discovered on the road while trying to honor her memory shattered everything I believed about my past — and gave me a new future I never saw coming.
After the funeral, the apartment felt like a tomb. The walls were too quiet. My father had left before I was even born, so it had always been just the two of us. Now it was just me — surrounded by the ghost of her laughter and the smell of the coffee she used to make every morning.
I couldn’t stay there. Every corner reminded me of her, of what I’d lost. So I sold the apartment, packed two suitcases, and decided to travel to the small town where she grew up — the place she had mysteriously kept a property she’d never told me about.
“I’m going home for you,” I murmured. “To where you loved.”
On my last day in the city, I came across a small classified ad that caught my eye:
“1985 RV for sale. Runs. Needs TLC. Cheap.”
Maybe it was impulse, or maybe fate. But within an hour, I was standing in a stranger’s driveway, staring at an old, rusted RV that smelled like dust and engine oil. The man selling it looked as tired as the vehicle itself.