I am a thirty eight year old mother named Tanya who was raised by my mother Nancy to keep a tidy life and leave family secrets deeply buried. I always believed I had mastered her strict philosophy while living a quiet life with my husband Richie. Everything I thought I knew completely shattered when my elderly neighbor Mister Whitmore passed away. The morning after his funeral I received a thick envelope in my mailbox addressed to me in his looping blue handwriting. The short letter explained that he had hidden a massive secret in his backyard for forty years and instructed me to dig under his old apple tree to uncover the truth.
My husband offered to help me search the yard but I decided to cross into the neighboring property entirely by myself the following morning. I pressed a shovel into the soft soil beneath the trembling apple blossoms and quickly struck a rusted metal box. Inside the container I discovered an old photograph of a young man holding a newborn baby under bright hospital lights alongside my original birth bracelet. A deeply emotional letter rested beside the items explaining that my mother was only nineteen when her family forced him away. He eventually moved right next door to watch me grow up from a distance because he was actually my biological father.
Richie eventually found me sitting in the muddy dirt with tears streaming down my face as my orderly life completely fractured. I immediately called my mother to my house and watched all the color drain from her face when I showed her the hidden photograph. She tearfully explained that her parents had threatened to throw her out if she stayed with him and claimed she kept him a secret to protect my childhood. I firmly corrected her by stating that she allowed my father to live next door in silence merely to protect herself from hatred and avoid a difficult situation.
The revelation caused a massive storm of hushed opinions throughout my family over the next week. During a tense family dinner Aunt Linda loudly defended my mother by insisting she did what was necessary at the time. I calmly replied that she simply did what was easiest and asserted my right to feel deeply hurt by the deception which prompted a rare and genuine apology from my mother. I later visited the grave of Mister Whitmore with fresh apple blossoms wishing we had been given more time to know each other. I realized that while forgiveness will take time I finally know exactly where I come from and my history will never be buried again.