I Married an Old Widow to Get a Fortune – After Her Funeral, the Lawyer Handed Me an Old Sewing Machine and a Letter
Daniel, I have one final job for you.
All I have to help you with your search is inside the sewing machine.
Find him for me, Daniel. I could not.
Do this, and everything I had is yours.
I put the letter back in the envelope and unfolded the birth certificate.
Eleanor was listed as the mother.
The father was some man named Michael that she’d never mentioned.
Then I saw the name of the child on the birth certificate and my blood ran cold.
Find him for me, Daniel. I could not.
I reached into my glove box, where I still kept all my important papers from the time when I’d lived in my car.
Then I rushed back into Halsey’s office.
Marlene was still leaning over Halsey’s desk, voice sharp.
“He has no right to any of it,” she snapped.
I walked past her and placed the birth certificate on the desk.
I rushed back into Halsey’s office.
Then I placed the photographs beside it.
The photo on top showed a young Eleanor holding a swaddled baby.
Marlene went quiet.
“Your aunt had a son,” I said. “She spent sixty years looking for him. She asked me to find him, but it turns out, I already know what happened to him.”
Joanne stared at the photograph. “What?”
“I already know what happened to him.”
Halsey opened a drawer and removed a thick file.
“Eleanor hired investigators three separate times,” he said quietly. “Each search ended the same way.”
Marlene’s face tightened. “Don’t.”
Halsey ignored her. “Letters went missing. Records disappeared. Information was withheld.”
Joanne slowly turned toward her sister. “Marlene?”
“Each search ended the same way.”
“I was protecting the family,” she said.
“No,” Halsey replied. “You were protecting an inheritance.”
The room fell silent.
Then Halsey turned to me.
“Daniel,” he asked in a low voice. “You said you already know what happened to Eleanor’s son. How is that possible?”
“You were protecting an inheritance.”
I pointed to the name on the birth certificate.
“Thomas. R.” Then I pulled out my own birth certificate and set it on the desk. I pointed to my father’s name. “Thomas. R. Born on the same day as Eleanor’s son. It can’t be a coincidence.”
Halsey looked at me gently. “Your father was Eleanor’s son.”
I nodded. “He died when I was twenty.”
I understood now why Eleanor’s words had always landed somewhere deeper than they should have.
I pointed to the name on the birth certificate.
Why being in her kitchen had felt like coming home before I ever knew the place.
I hadn’t spent four years caring for a lonely widow.
I’d spent four years caring for my grandmother.
And neither of us had known.
Joanne covered her mouth and began to cry.
Marlene sank into a chair.
Being in her kitchen had felt like coming home.
“You knew there had been a child,” Joanne said to her sister. “You let her spend her whole life searching.”
Marlene stared at the floor.
For once, she had nothing to say.
***
Months later, I sat in Eleanor’s yellow kitchen.
The sewing machine rested on the table, polished, its gold letters catching the light.
“You let her spend her whole life searching.”
Beside it stood two photographs.
One of Eleanor, and one of my father as a boy.
Outside, rain tapped softly against the windows.
I never got to tell her the truth.
But she had found her family after all.
She just hadn’t lived long enough to know it.
