Grandpa Found His Missing Grandson Behind a Locked Basement Door-Neyney - Chainityai

Grandpa Found His Missing Grandson Behind a Locked Basement Door-Neyney

My grandson hadn’t come to visit me for three weeks… so I decided to go see him unannounced… when I entered the house, I headed to the basement, which was locked from the outside, and a nauseating smell was coming from it, making me hold my breath… when the basement door opened, what was inside left me completely shattered…

By the twenty-second day, I had run out of excuses for Laura.

That was the truth I did not want to say out loud.

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I had spent three weeks protecting her in my own mind, because she was Dylan’s mother, because she had buried my son, because a child’s life was already hard enough without his grandfather admitting that something in his house felt wrong.

But excuses can sour just like milk.

At first, I told myself Dylan was busy.

He was eleven now, old enough to have homework, friends, video games, and moods he did not owe me an explanation for.

Then I told myself Laura was tired.

She worked long shifts and had always hated answering the phone when she felt cornered.

Then I told myself Mark was trying.

That was the lie I liked least, but I still tried to hold it for Dylan’s sake.

After my son died four years earlier, Dylan became my Saturday boy.

Every Saturday morning, I would hear his sneakers slap across my porch before I even saw him through the screen door.

He never knocked.

He never had to.

He would let himself in, drop his backpack by the chair, and ask if I had hot chocolate even in July.

He told me everything at that kitchen table.

Soccer practice.

Spelling tests.

The boy in his class who could burp the alphabet.

The teacher who kept peppermints in her desk and pretended nobody knew.

Sometimes he talked so fast I barely had time to nod.

Sometimes he sat quiet and leaned against me, especially in the first year after his father died.

I never pushed him.

A child’s grief comes in pieces, and you do not get to decide which piece he hands you.

Laura used to bring him herself in the beginning.

She would stand in my doorway with dark circles under her eyes and a paper coffee cup in her hand, trying to smile like she had slept.

I felt sorry for her then.

I still do, in the old part of my heart that remembers the funeral.

When Mark moved in, I told myself a house with two adults might be steadier.

He shook my hand the first time we met.

He called me “sir.”

He said Dylan needed structure.

I remember not liking the word, though I could not explain why at the time.

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