The wood floors were polished, the furniture wasn’t falling apart, and a neat stack of firewood leaned against the stone fireplace. I shut the door and leaned against it, wondering if Dad had arranged for someone to keep an eye on the cabin.
My bag sat heavy at my feet, but what caught my attention was a framed photograph on the mantle. I stepped closer. It was Dad, young, barely 20, standing in front of this same cabin with an older woman I didn’t recognize. On the back, written in his sharp handwriting: With Grandma Rose, 1962, the place where everything began.
Grandma Rose.
Dad had never mentioned a Rose. He always said his parents died young. No family left.
I studied the woman’s face. She had kind eyes and a look that suggested she wasn’t someone you messed with. For a second, I almost felt like she was looking right back at me.
A knock on the door made me jump. My hand instinctively reached for where my sidearm usually was before I remembered I wasn’t on duty. I peered through the window. An older man stood on the porch holding a casserole dish.
“Mrs. Whitmore,” he called out.
I opened the door cautiously.
“It’s Captain Whitmore. Who are you?”
He gave a warm smile.
“Name’s Jack Reynolds. I live two cabins down. Marine Corps, retired. Your father asked me to check in when the time came. He said you might need a friend out here.”
Marine Corps. That explained the straight posture and the haircut still sharp at 70.
He held out the dish.
“Beef stew. Figured you’d be hungry after the drive.”
I hesitated, then took it.
“You knew my dad?”
Jack nodded.
“Knew him well enough. He came up here a week before he passed. Spent three days organizing things. Told me his daughter might show up one day looking like the world had turned on her. Said I should remind you that sometimes the most valuable treasures are hidden in unexpected places. His words, not mine.”
My throat tightened.
“He really said that?”
“Clear as day,” Jack replied. “Oh, and he said you should check under the kitchen floorboard when you’re ready.”
He tipped his cap and started down the steps before I could ask another question.
I shut the door, the stew heavy in my hands, and stood there in silence. Dad had known this was coming. He’d prepared for it. And now here I was, holding his message like some coded mission brief.