For three years, everyone on Maple Street thought they knew Mrs. Patterson.
She baked cookies for the neighborhood kids. She watered her garden every morning at 7 AM. She told everyone she was a retired English teacher.
But on the day of her funeral, a woman in her 40s walked into the church. She looked exactly like Mrs. Patterson. Same eyes. Same nose. Same way of tilting her head.
"I'm Patricia," she said. "I'm looking for my mother, Evelyn Patterson."
The room went silent.
Because Mrs. Patterson's first name wasn't Evelyn. And she never mentioned having a daughter.
Over the next week, the truth unraveled. The woman we knew as Mrs. Patterson was living under a false identity. She had disappeared from another life 30 years ago.
A life that included a husband, three children, and a secret she took to her grave.
The daughter never found out why her mother left. But she did find something in the house.
A single photograph, hidden under the floorboards. A photograph of a man none of the neighbors had ever seen.
And written on the back: "I'm sorry. I had no choice."
Some mysteries are never meant to be solved.