“Because I gave it to her first,” Victor said.
I stared at him. “When?”
“When she was around ten, maybe younger,” he said. “She’d had a terrible day. I told her if she wore it, she could pretend I was walking beside her.”
Victor opened the locket. Inside was a faded photograph of two children sitting on porch steps, his arm wrapped around her shoulders. Scratched onto the back in childish handwriting were three words: “My safe place.”
My throat tightened. “That’s Mom? And the boy is you?”
Victor nodded.
I stepped backward. “No. Mom only had one brother. Mark was the youngest.”
“I wish I was lying,” Victor said.
“If you were her brother,” I said, my voice rising, “why did she make you live outside?”
Before he could answer, Mrs. Bell spoke. “Because Mark scared her. He told Stephanie people would call her unfit if she let Victor near you. She was poor, raising a child alone, and terrified. She kept him close, behind the house. That was all she believed she could risk.”
My mind immediately returned to Mom’s hospital room. “The blue box,” I whispered.
I rushed inside and tore through Mom’s closet until I found the hidden blue box. Inside was a letter addressed to me in Mom’s handwriting:
“Fiona, Victor was my brother before he was anything else. He packed my lunch, walked me to school, and kept me warm when we were freezing. But when Victor got sick, our family punished him. Mark told me that if I let Victor near you, people would ask whether I was fit to be your mother. I believed he could take you from me. So I made the worst bargain of my life. I kept Victor alive, but I let you think he was a stranger. Please don’t let Mark put him outside again. Love, Mom.”
When I returned to the living room, Uncle Mark was already inside holding the blue box. “Put that down,” I said. “You’ve handled enough.”
Then Victor stepped in behind me. Mark’s expression hardened immediately. “Get him out.”
I moved in front of Victor. “His name is Victor. He’s Mom’s brother.”
Aunt Linda gasped. “But you said he died, Mark!”
“Because that was easier,” Mark snapped.
“I lifted Mom’s letter,” I said. “She wrote everything down. You threatened her, used her poverty against her, and made her believe loving her brother could cost her daughter.”
The room fell into a heavy, judgment-filled silence. Mark searched the room, found no allies, dropped the box, and walked out for good.
I turned toward Victor. “Uncle Victor,” I said, pulling out a chair at our worn kitchen table. “Come sit down. You don’t eat outside anymore. Tonight, you’re staying here.”
For the first time in twenty years, Victor’s meal didn’t leave through the back door. It remained at the table. Right where family belonged.
