The Letter
My name is Linda. I’m a 67-year-old retired teacher living in Oregon with my husband Carl. After forty years in the classroom, I thought I’d seen it all—teenage drama, helicopter parents, the evolution from chalkboards to iPads. Now my days are filled with tending to my prized dahlias, debating the merits of historical fiction at our neighborhood book club, and occasionally binge-watching British murder mysteries with Carl. It’s a quiet life, but it’s ours, and we’ve settled into retirement like a pair of old slippers—comfortable and predictable. That Tuesday started like any other. I was sorting through our mail at the kitchen table—bills, advertisements, a postcard from our neighbors vacationing in Arizona—when I spotted an envelope with an unfamiliar law firm’s letterhead. My first thought was that it must be a mistake. My second thought was that someone was trying to scam us—you know how they target seniors these days. But when I opened it, my hands began to tremble. The letter was about Diane Porter—a name I hadn’t heard spoken aloud in over forty years. My childhood best friend. The person who knew all my secrets, who held my hand at my father’s funeral, who suddenly vanished from my life without explanation. And now, according to this very official-looking document, she was dead. But that wasn’t even the most shocking part. Apparently, Diane had left me everything she owned.
