“She told you?”
Inside were photos, letters, and envelopes.
The first picture showed Mom as a little girl beside Victor. Her knees were scraped. His lip was split.
On the back, in Mom’s handwriting, were the words:
“Victor walked me home again.”
I opened the letter with my name on it.
“Fiona,
If you are reading this, then I wasn’t brave enough to tell you while I was alive.”
“Victor walked me home again.”
“Victor was my brother before he was anything else. He packed my lunch, walked me to school, and gave me the good blanket when there was only one.
Once, when we were kids, he took our mother’s bracelet and tried to sell it. Not for candy. For blankets, because the pipes had frozen and we were freezing.
They never forgave him. Not Mark, not our parents.
Mark used that story for years. “Victor steals,” he’d say, even after Victor kept me warm.
Then Victor got sick, and our family punished him for becoming the kind of person they already wanted to throw away.”
“They never forgave him.”
“Mark said Victor was dangerous. He said I was too poor to understand risk. When you were little, he told me that if I let Victor near you, people would ask whether I was fit to be your mother.
I believed he could take you from me.
So I made the worst bargain of my life. I kept Victor alive, but I let you think he was a stranger.
Please don’t let Mark put him outside again.
Love, Mom.”
“I let you think he was a stranger.”
I grabbed the box and ran next door.
Mrs. Bell opened the door before I finished knocking.
“You know,” she said.
I held up the photo. “Tell me I’m not losing my mind.”
“No, honey. You’re finally being told the truth.”
“Why didn’t anyone tell me?”
I grabbed the box.
“Your mama was scared.”
“Of Mark?”
Mrs. Bell nodded. “And of the story your family kept repeating. Everyone forgot why Victor took that bracelet.”
“For blankets,” I whispered.
“For survival,” she said. “Then Mark grew up and learned how useful shame could be.”
I thought of the boots. The firewood. The porch step.
He’d been there the whole time.
As close as they let him be.
“For survival.”
When I walked back into Mom’s house, Mark was already there, holding the blue box.
I stopped in the doorway. “Put that down.”
He gave me his softest smile. “Fiona, you’re upset. Let me handle this.”
“No,” I said. “You handled enough.”
Then Victor stepped in behind me.
Mark’s face hardened. “Get him out.”
I moved in front of Victor. “His name is Victor. He’s Mom’s brother.”
“You handled enough.”
Aunt Linda gasped. “But you said he died, Mark!”
Mark snapped, “Because that was easier.”
“Easier for who?” I asked.
He looked at his wife, waiting for her to rescue him.
I lifted Mom’s letter.
“She wrote everything down. You threatened her, used her poverty against her, and made her believe loving her brother could cost her daughter.”
“But you said he died, Mark!”
“I protected this family,” Mark said.
“No. You protected the version where Victor didn’t exist.”
Victor’s voice shook, but he stood tall. “I chose Stephanie when you chose appearances.”
Mark grabbed his coat. “You’ll regret this, Fiona. He’ll suck the life out of you. He did that to Stephanie.”
“I already regret too much,” I said. “But not this.”
Aunt Linda stepped between him and the hallway table, where Mom’s papers were stacked.
“I protected this family.”
“Leave the box,” she said to her husband.
Mark stared at her. “Linda.”
“No,” she said, her voice shaking. “You told us he was dead.”
The room went quiet in a different way then. Not confused. Judging.
Mark found no friendly face.
Then he dropped the box, yanked open the door, and left.
“Leave the box.”
I turned to Victor.
“Uncle Victor,” I said, pulling out a chair. “Come sit down.”
I set two bowls of soup on Mom’s chipped kitchen table.
Victor stopped at the doorway. “I can eat outside.”
“No,” I said. “You don’t eat outside anymore. Tonight, you’re staying here. Tomorrow, we’ll figure out the rest together.”
He sat slowly, holding the locket.
For the first time in twenty years, Victor’s meal didn’t leave through the back door.