The Funeral Key Led To A Locker My Stepfather Had Been Hiding For Thirty Years-Cherry

Thomas Brooks stopped three storage doors away from me, his black funeral shoes touching the painted yellow line on the concrete.

For the first time that day, he did not look like a grieving husband.

He looked like a man who had arrived too late.

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The fluorescent light above Unit 27 flickered against his silver tie. The air smelled like hot metal, oil, and the paper dust rising from the envelope in my hand. Somewhere behind the office, a truck backed up with three sharp beeps, then went quiet.

Thomas looked at the manila envelope pressed against my uniform.

“Put that down,” he said.

Not loud.

Not frantic.

Worse.

Like I was still six years old and he had found me touching something from a locked drawer.

My thumb stayed on the edge of the photograph. Daniel Mercer’s face looked up from my hand, young and steady, with a baby wrapped against his chest.

I had my mother’s eyes.

I had his jaw.

Thomas stepped closer.

“Your mother was sick at the end,” he said. “She confused things.”

I slid the photograph behind the birth certificate and folded the police report over both.

“Then why did you text me not to open the locker?”

His face barely changed, but his right hand tightened around my mother’s house key until the brass bit into his palm.

“That priest had no right.”

The phone number on the back of the photo pressed into my fingers like a pulse.

U.S. MARSHAL — DANIEL’S CASE.

I turned the photograph over, kept my eyes on Thomas, and dialed.

He saw the movement.

His smile disappeared completely.

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