After Grandma Evelyn died, I thought packing up her little house would be the hardest part of losing her. But when I stood before the basement door she had kept locked my whole life and realized I would have to go down there, I never expected to uncover a life-changing secret.If you’d told me a year ago that my life was about to become a complicated, emotional detective novel centered on my grandma, I’d have laughed in your face.Grandma Evelyn had been my anchor since I was 12.I never knew my father, and after my mom died in a car accident, Evelyn took me in without hesitation.
I remember being so small and lost, but her house became my haven.Evelyn taught me everything important: how to manage heartbreak, how to bake a proper apple pie, and how to look a person in the eye when you told them ‘no.’Grandma could be strict, but she had only one unbreakable rule: Don’t go near the basement.Behind the house, near the back steps, there was an old basement entrance — a heavy metal door attached to the back of the house.It was always locked. I never once saw it open.Of course, I asked about it. When you’re a kid, you see a locked door, and you think it must lead to treasure, or a secret spy room, or something equally dramatic.