I Buried My Father’s Best Friend Who Raised Me Like His Own—Three Days Later, a Note Revealed: ‘He Wasn’t Who He Pretended to Be’

I Buried My Father’s Best Friend Who Raised Me Like His Own—Three Days Later, a Note Revealed: ‘He Wasn’t Who He Pretended to Be’

Before I even realized what I was doing, I was already out the front door.

“Hey!” I called. “Excuse me! Hey!”

She didn’t stop. She didn’t even react.

By the time I reached the end of the path, she had already turned the corner and disappeared.

I stood there on the sidewalk, breathing hard, then turned and opened the mailbox.

Inside was a single envelope.

No name. No stamp. No return address.

My hands trembled as I pulled out its contents—a folded handwritten note and a small black flash drive.

I read the note right there: “You don’t know what really happened to your parents. Thomas… He wasn’t who he pretended to be. If you want the whole truth, watch the flash drive.”

I read it three times. My ears rang.

Then I went back inside, locked the door, and sat at the kitchen table, the flash drive resting in my hand.

There’s a kind of dread that has nothing to do with what you already know. I could feel it sitting heavily in my chest—cold, still, and immovable.

Dad had only been gone for 72 hours. Whatever was on that drive had the power to reshape every memory I had of him.

But not knowing felt worse. It always does.

So I plugged it into my laptop.

For illustrative purposes only

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