I set the stew on the counter and dropped to my knees by the kitchen table. The boards were old pine, scuffed from decades of boots and chairs. Running my hand along the floor, I found one plank that shifted slightly. My heart raced. I pried it up with a pocketknife, and sure enough, there was a metal box wrapped in oil cloth.
I carried it to the table, wiped the dust off, and opened it.
Inside were papers, photographs, and a letter addressed to me in Dad’s handwriting. But what stopped me cold was the geological survey tucked underneath. My military training had me scanning numbers and summaries fast. Words jumped out: granite, feldspar, high yield, estimated commercial value substantial.
Megan thought she’d stuck me with worthless wood and creaky floors. What I actually had was land sitting on top of serious mineral deposits.
I sat down hard, staring at the paper. Dad hadn’t left me scraps. He left me something valuable, something he didn’t trust Megan with.
Hands shaking, I opened the letter.
My dearest Hannah, if you’re reading this, I was right about Megan. I pray I’m wrong, but I saw the signs. The way she looks at our home like it’s hers. The way she dismisses you when she thinks I’m not listening. I need you to know about Rose. She wasn’t my blood grandmother, but she took me in after my parents died. This was her cabin, her land. She studied it her whole life. She knew it held resources, but told me to protect it. She said one day it might give my family what they truly needed: security, independence, and strength. Now it’s your turn.
I set the letter down, tears blurring the words. Dad had trusted me, not Megan. He had seen something in me she never could. I pushed the letter aside and picked up one of the old photos. Dad stood next to Rose, and behind them, I spotted survey markers in the ground. She’d known. She had left all this to him, and now it was mine.
My phone buzzed on the table. Megan, of course. I didn’t answer, but the text lit up the screen.
How’s the shack, Hannah? Still smell like mold?
I stared at it and almost laughed. If only she knew.
The night wore on as I went through the box. Land deeds, bank statements, Dad’s notes. The deeper I dug, the clearer it became. This wasn’t just property. It was leverage. It was power. And I was the one holding it.
By midnight, I finally ate the stew. It was damn good. Marine good.