When Travis moves his family to a quiet town in Maine, he hopes for a new chapter in their lives. But a discovery deep in the woods — a headstone bearing his childhood photo — pulls him into a decades-old mystery…
We had only been in Maine for three weeks when it happened.
My wife, Lily, our eight-year-old son, Ryan, and our Doberman, Brandy, were adjusting to the cold slower than I was. But after 16 years of living in Texas, I welcomed the sting of the crisp morning air in my lungs, the soft hush of pine needles underfoot, and the silence of a town that didn’t know our names.
“This place smells like Christmas,” Lily had whispered on the first morning, standing barefoot at the back door in a borrowed flannel shirt.
I welcomed the sting of the crisp morning air in my lungs.
I remember smiling at her and at the way peace looked good on her face.
That Saturday, we decided to go on a mushroom hunt behind the cottage. It wasn’t for anything fancy or borderline dangerous as far as mushrooms go; just the kind that Lily could sauté in butter and garlic while Ryan boasted about his foraging skills.
Brandy barked at everything that moved. Ryan ran ahead of us with a plastic bucket, swiping at ferns like they were dragon tails.
I remember smiling at the way peace looked good on her face.
It was the kind of day that settles into your memory before it even ends.
Until… it got twisted.
Suddenly, Brandy’s bark changed. It dropped an octave, immediately alerting me, and then he growled — low and with warning…
I looked up, and my son was gone.
Until… it got twisted.
“Ryan?” I called out. “Hey, buddy — answer me! This isn’t a game, okay?”
Brandy’s barking grew sharper ahead of me, echoing somewhere just beyond the trees.
“Keep him safe, Bran,” I muttered to myself. “I’m coming.”
I pushed through the brush, careful not to trip over the exposed roots crisscrossing the path. The trail narrowed without warning, winding between tall pines that blocked out most of the afternoon light.
“Hey, buddy — answer me!”
My boots sank into damp moss, and the air suddenly felt cooler and too quiet.
“Lily, come on!” I shouted at my wife.
“Coming, honey,” she said, sounding exhausted and scared at the same time. “Coming!”
“Ryan!” I shouted once more.
A flicker of unease rose in my chest.
“Lily, come on!”
Then I heard him. Not my son’s voice, no. But his laugh. And Brandy was barking again, but not aggressively.
I picked up my pace.
I emerged into a clearing I hadn’t seen before and stopped dead in my tracks.
“Uh… guys?” I called over my shoulder, just as Lily caught up to me. She stopped beside me, eyes scanning the space. Her brow furrowed.
“What is this place?” she asked, her voice low and cautious. “Travis… those are headstones, aren’t they?”
And Brandy barking again, but not aggressively.
She walked a little further, then hesitated. My wife was right. There were a few headstones scattered around the clearing. It was eerie, but peaceful at the same time.
“And those are flowers. Look at this, honey. There are so many dried bouquets, everywhere!”
She pointed toward one of the graves. A dozen brittle stems lay across its base, tied together with faded ribbon.
“Someone came here,” I said. “Well… has been coming here for a long time.”
There’s so many dried bouquets, everywhere…”
Lily opened her mouth to respond, but Ryan’s voice beat her to it.
“Daddy! Mommy! Come look! I found something… I found a picture of Dad!” he called out, the excitement palpable.
My son was crouched in front of a small headstone tucked between two elm trees. His finger was pressed to the front of the stone, like he was tracing something.
“I found a picture of Dad!”
“What do you mean, my picture?” I asked, moving toward him carefully through the weeds. My chest felt tight, and I was starting to feel dizzy.
“It’s you, Daddy,” Ryan said, not even turning around. “It’s the baby you! Don’t we have a photo like this above the fireplace?”
When I stepped beside him and looked down, my breath caught in my throat.
My chest felt tight.
Set into the headstone was a ceramic photograph. It was worn from age and chipped in the right corner… but it was still unmistakably clear.
It was me.
I was maybe four years old, my dark hair a little longer than Ryan’s now. My eyes were wide and unsure, and I was wearing a yellow shirt I only vaguely remembered from a torn Polaroid back home in Texas.
Beneath the photograph was a single line etched into the headstone.
It was me.
“January 29, 1984.”
It was my birthday.
Lily reached for my arm. In my shock, I hadn’t realized how close she’d gotten. Her voice was quiet but firm.
“Travis, please. This is too strange. I don’t know what this is, but I want to go home. Come, Ryan,” she said, holding her hand out for Ryan.
“January 29, 1984.”
“No. Wait! Just a minute, please, Lily,” I said, shaking my head once. “I just want to… see.”
I knelt down and touched the edge of the ceramic frame. It was cold. For a second, everything around me dulled. I felt something shift inside me — not just panic exactly, but something deeper.
It was like… recognition I wasn’t ready for.
That night, after Ryan was asleep, I sat at the kitchen table with the photo pulled up on my phone.
“I just want to… see.”
“What on earth is going on here?” I muttered. “I don’t understand. That is me, there’s no doubt. But I’ve never been here before. I’m sure I’d remember that?”
My wife sat across from me, her expression unreadable.
“Is there any chance your adopted mom ever mentioned Maine?”
“No,” I replied. “I asked her once, when I was much younger. I just wanted to know my story, you know? She said she didn’t know much. Just that she got me from a firefighter named Ed, and that I was left outside a burning house when I was four. The only thing I had was a note pinned to my shirt.”
“Is there any chance your adopted mom ever mentioned Maine?”
“What did it say, Travis?” Lily asked, her eyes wide.
We’d spoken about this before, but after Ryan’s little discovery, everything had seemed… different and darker somehow.
“‘Please take care of this boy. His name is Travis.’ That was it. I’m pretty sure my mom has it stuck in a scrapbook or something.”
Lily reached for my hand and squeezed gently.
‘Please take care of this boy. His name is Travis.’
“Maybe there’s someone in this town who knows more. Someone who remembers the fire… and maybe even your birth parents, Trav. Maybe fate allowed us to move here for a reason?”
I nodded slowly. I didn’t know what else to say. I had always felt a little lost in my life. I couldn’t remember my birth parents. I couldn’t even remember if I’d had any siblings or grandparents.
It was as though that time of my life had been redacted by some force higher than me.
“Maybe fate allowed us to move here for a reason?”
The next day, I visited the local library and asked about the property behind our cottage. The woman at the front desk looked confused.
“There used to be a family who lived off-grid back there years ago. But the house burned down when a spark from the fireplace landed on a curtain. People don’t really talk about it anymore.”
I asked if anyone still living in town might know more.
“Try Clara M.,” she said. “She’s the old woman who sits at the apple stall in the daily market. She’s nearly 90 years old. And she’s lived here her whole life. That’s your best bet. Here’s her address.”
“People don’t really talk about it anymore.”
Clara’s house was small, shaded by thick pine trees, with lace curtains and a chipped mailbox in the shape of a bus. When she answered the door, her expression shifted from polite curiosity to startled recognition.
“You… you’re Travis?” she asked, her cataract eyes widened.
I nodded slowly.
“And you’ve come home? Well, you’d better come in then, hadn’t you?”
She spoke like a woman straight out of a fairytale.
“You… you’re Travis?”
Her living room smelled like cedar and something softly sweet, like apple tea and old paper. It reminded me of a school library, the kind with dusty windows and silence that meant something.
I handed her my phone with the photo I’d taken at the headstone displayed on screen. Clara held it close, squinting slightly. Her hands were thin, the skin papered with time.
She stared at the picture longer than I expected.
Her hands were thin,
the skin papered with time.
“That photo,” she said slowly, “was taken by your father, Travis. Your real father, I mean. His name was Shawn, and it was the day after you and your brother turned four. I baked the cake for your birthday. Vanilla sponge and strawberry jam. And cream.”
I was stunned… Clara had just dropped a bombshell on me, and yet, here she was, talking about… cake.
“I had a twin? Ma’am, are you sure?”
“Yes, son,” she said, smiling gently. “His name was Caleb. You were inseparable — identical in every way.”
“I had a twin?”
The room swayed slightly. I pressed my hand to my forehead to steady myself.
“No one ever told me,” I said.
“Maybe… they just didn’t know,” Clara said, folding her hands in her lap. “There was a fire… your family lived in a small cabin beyond the ridge. Your parents were young, Travis, and they didn’t have much. But they loved you both.”
She paused, like she was weighing how much to say.
“Maybe… they just didn’t know.”
“It was a ridiculously cold winter… and we all had our fireplaces going. The fire started sometime during the night. By the time anyone noticed, the cabin was almost burnt to the ground. They found three bodies.”
“My parents and my brother?” I asked.
“Yes,” Clara agreed, nodding. “That’s what they believed.”
“But I wasn’t in the cabin?”
“No, honey. You weren’t.”
“They found three bodies.”
“So how did I end up in Texas?” I asked, a soft ringing starting in my ears.
“That’s the part no one ever knew,” Clara said, giving a sad smile. “I always thought that maybe you had been in the house too… but maybe… they just missed your little body. I don’t know, son. I don’t know what else to tell you.”
The old woman reached for a photo album. Inside was a newspaper clipping from 1988.
“I don’t know, son.”
“Fire Destroys Family Cabin — Three Dead, One Unaccounted.”
Below it was a photo of two boys standing in a field. They were identical in every way but the tilt of one smile.
I touched the page lightly.
“After the fire, your father’s younger brother, Tom, came back to the property. He stayed in town for a few months, trying to rebuild what he could. He placed a few memorial stones, including the one with your photo,” Clara continued.
I looked at her, confused.
“Fire Destroys Family Cabin — Three Dead, One Unaccounted.”
“Why would he do that if I wasn’t dead?”
“Because no one knew for sure,” she said. “There were no dental records. And no reliable filing systems back then. The clinic where you and your brother were born had burst pipes the following year. By then, all the medical records that could’ve helped identify you were gone. Tom always believed that one of you might’ve survived. But the town had already moved on to the next tragedy.”
“Where is he now?”
“He still lives at the edge of town. But he keeps to himself. He’s not the same.”
“There were no dental records.”
The next morning, Lily came with me. She didn’t say much on the way there, but her hand sat on my thigh the entire drive. Tom’s front yard was wild and overgrown, but not abandoned. A row of fresh bird feeders hung from the porch beams, and a cracked wind chime swayed above the door.
When he answered, he looked at me for several long seconds, then blinked like he had seen a ghost.
“I’m Travis,” I said. “I think… I’m your nephew.”
His face shifted, softening in a way that made my throat catch.
He blinked like he’d seen a ghost.
He nodded and moved aside to let us in.
Inside, the house was warm. Books lined the corners, and a pot simmered quietly on the stove.
“You look just like your father,” Tom said finally.
I didn’t know how to respond.
“I came back after the fire. Everyone else said the boys were gone, but I couldn’t accept it. I kept thinking — maybe Mara got one of you out. She would’ve tried. Your mother would have done anything for you boys.”
“You look just like your father.”
My eyes burned. I looked at the man who had kept the memory alive.
“When I placed the headstone,” Tom said, “I didn’t know it would bring you back… but I hoped. And I prayed that wherever you landed up, you were okay.”
I nodded and held tightly onto my wife’s hand.
“Caleb was always quieter,” he said after a moment. “You were the wild one, Travis.”
“And I prayed that wherever
you landed up,
you were okay.”
We spent the afternoon going through smoke-stained boxes. There were a few drawings on brittle, half-burned paper. There was a birthday card addressed to ‘Our boys,’ its ink faded and smudged.
At the bottom of the box was a small yellow shirt, scorched at one sleeve.
I took it home.
A week later, we returned to the clearing. Tom and Lily were with us, but they were talking to each other.
There was a birthday card addressed to ‘Our boys.'”
The headstone was waiting. I knelt and placed the card at its base.
“Dad? Are we visiting your brother?” Ryan asked.
“Yes,” I said. “His name was Caleb.”
“I wish I could’ve met him,” Ryan said, leaning against me. Brandy sniffed the card.
The headstone was waiting.
“Me too, son. Me too.”
The breeze rustled through the trees.
I glanced at Tom and wondered, just for a moment, if he was the one who’d written the note. Maybe giving me away was his way of keeping me alive… or giving me a chance at life without tragedy.
Maybe giving me away was his way of keeping me alive…
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