The Mysterious Letter
My name is Evelyn, I’m 69, and I’ve lived in the same small Ohio town nearly all my life. Nothing exciting ever happens here—that’s just how I like it. After working thirty years at the post office, I’ve seen enough drama in other people’s mail to last a lifetime. I raised my two kids, Claire and Patrick, mostly on my own after my husband Tom passed away from a heart attack at 42. That was twenty-seven years ago now. Since then, I’ve settled into a comfortable routine: morning coffee with the newspaper (yes, I still get the actual paper), afternoon walks to the library, and evenings with my knitting and whatever crime show is on TV. Nothing special about me—just another gray-haired lady who remembers when this town had a drive-in theater. So you can imagine my shock when I received that cream-colored envelope with the gold embossed return address. A law firm I’d never heard of—Peterson, Marks & Associates—requesting my presence at the reading of a will for someone named Richard Whitmore. I must have read it five times, thinking it was one of those scams targeting seniors. You know the type—Nigerian princes or fake lottery winnings. But this letter was different: heavy paper, professionally printed, delivered by an actual courier who needed my signature. I called the number on the letterhead, certain there was some mistake. The receptionist confirmed it was legitimate. Richard Whitmore. The name meant absolutely nothing to me. Yet somehow, this stranger had put me in his will. And that, my friends, was just the beginning of how my predictable little life got turned completely upside down.



























































