I thought losing my mother meant being alone, then a private investigator revealed the secret she had been hiding my whole life.

My whole life, my mother insisted we had no one else, no history, no family outside of the two of us. So, after I buried her and hired a private investigator to find answers, I thought I was chasing old documents—until I realized someone was watching me first.

When my mother died, the hardest part was coming home to a spotless apartment, sitting in the silence, and realizing that the one thing she’d always warned me about had finally come true: I was alone.

I’m 32 years old. I own a small translation agency in Chicago. I have six employees and a client base I’ve built from scratch over the past ten years.

On paper, my life seems perfect.

After my mother died, I didn’t think so.

Her name was Maria. She wasn’t exactly cold, but she was withdrawn in a way I never understood. She loved me deeply, but she treated the past like a locked room filled with poison gas. If I even touched the handle, the door would slam.

“Did you have any brothers or sisters?”

“No.”

“And your grandparents?”

“They’re gone.”

“Where was Dad from?”

“It doesn’t matter.”

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