After my grandmother — who took care of me — died, I found a key inside her old teapot and a note that said, “If you want the truth about your parents, open the drawer on the right side of my bed.”
For context, my parents died in a house fire when I was 11 months old. The story I was told my life was simple. My mother dropped me off with my grandmother the night before because she and my dad had something to do the next morning.
There was a fire in the middle of the night. They never made it out. My grandmother raised me after that.
She packed my lunch, sat through every dance recital, pretended my piano practicing was beautiful when I know it wasn’t, and called me every night after I moved away for work. So there I was, standing in her house after the funeral, trying to be practical. Trying to sort dishes and photo albums and cardigans while feeling like the walls had been hollowed out.
Then Martha from next door knocked and handed me Grandma’s old teapot. “I borrowed it before… before the end,” she said.I meant to bring it back sooner.”
Inside was a thick stack of papers tied with string, a photograph, a small metal box key, and a sealed envelope with my first name written on it in my grandmother’s handwriting. Inside was one page. If you are reading this, I am gone, and I have run out of reasons to keep this from you.
I lied because I believed the lie kept you alive.
I kept reading. My mother had not been just some young woman in a bad accident. She had come from one of the richest families in our town.
Not old-money-in-the-city rich. The worse kind. Small-town powerful.
The kind of family whose name is on buildings and benches and scholarship plaques. The kind people call generous while lowering their voices. My father worked for the family company.
According to the letters, he found records proving the company had been dumping waste illegally for years and paying people to stay quiet. Families got sick. Wells tested bad.
Complaints disappeared. My mother found out and sided with him. They were going to hand everything to a reporter.