After my parents passed away, my father’s best friend raised me like his own. Three days after his funeral, I received a FLASH DRIVE and a note that read, “HE WASN’T WHO HE PRETENDED TO BE… IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR PARENTS, WATCH THIS.” When I was three years old, my parents d:ied in a car accident. I barely remember them. Thomas had been my father’s best friend since childhood. He was incredibly close to both of my parents, so after their death, he took me in and raised me as his own. With him, I never felt alone. He read me bedtime stories, showed up to every school performance, and years later, he was the one who walked me down the aisle. Whenever I asked about my parents, Thomas would share a few memories—but never too many. He always said it was too painful to revisit, that they had been like family to him. He never married. He never had children of his own. I was his whole world—just as he was mine. Last month, he passed away from cancer. It felt like the ground disappeared beneath my feet. A few days after his funeral, I went back to his house to sort through his belongings. As I looked through the window, I noticed a woman I didn’t recognize slipping something into the mailbox. When I ran outside and called after her, she was already gone. I opened the mailbox. Inside was an envelope—no name, no stamp. My hands began to tremble as I pulled out a note and a flash drive. The message read: “You don’t know what really happened to your parents. Thomas… He wasn’t who he pretended to be. If you want the whole truth, watch the flash drive.” My heart started racing. I held the flash drive in my hand, frozen for a moment. Honestly, I was terrified. But my curiosity was stronger. I rushed inside and plugged it into my laptop. And when I opened the files… I almost fainted…

Last month, I buried the man who chose me when I was just three years old. He gave me his name, his love, and everything a daughter could ever hope for. Then, three days after the funeral, an envelope appeared in his mailbox—one that would shake everything I believed about the night my parents died.Child advocacy resources

Thomas’s house felt wrong without him.

He was my dad. And he had been a great Dad.

Everything inside remained exactly as it always had been. His reading glasses still rested neatly on the side table. His coffee mug—the ugly one I’d painted in third grade with uneven flowers—sat on the kitchen counter, right where he’d left it.

But despite all of that, the house felt hollow. Like a stage where all the props were still in place, but the only person who had ever brought them to life had simply walked away.

I had come there to start packing his things. Three days after burying him, I still hadn’t managed to put a single item into a box.

I stood in the living room, holding an empty cardboard box, staring blankly at his bookshelf—until something outside the front window caught my attention and froze me in place.

A woman.

She looked to be in her late 50s, wearing a dark coat and a scarf pulled high around her jaw. She moved quickly toward the mailbox at the end of the front path.

She paused for a moment, glanced back at the house, slid something inside, and turned to leave.

Something about her movement made my stomach tighten.

Before I even realized what I was doing, I was already out the front door.
“Hey!” I called. “Excuse me! Hey!”

She didn’t stop. She didn’t even react.

By the time I reached the end of the path, she had already turned the corner and disappeared.

I stood there on the sidewalk, breathing hard, then turned and opened the mailbox.

Inside was a single envelope.