He had changed into dirty clothes and switched his SUV for an old, rusted car I’d never seen before. My gut twisted, so I decided to follow him. He drove for nearly an hour, out of the city, off the highway, and down a narrow road into the forest.
No cell signal. I parked at a distance and crept forward on foot. My husband was standing with some guy near a half-dug pit.
They were both wearing gloves. The guy handed my husband something wrapped in plastic, and I swear—he flinched. Then my foot snapped a twig.
Both men turned. My husband looked straight at me and said, “Babe, what are you doing here?”
I froze. My brain scrambled for a lie, but none came.
“I could ask you the same thing.”
The other man narrowed his eyes. “You followed him?”
My husband stepped in front of him. “It’s okay.
Just give me a second.”
He walked toward me slowly, wiping his hands on his jeans. “It’s not what it looks like.”
“Are you serious right now? You’re in the woods with some guy, a shovel, and—what is that?
A body?” I whispered harshly, heart pounding. “It’s not a body!” he said too quickly. “Just… just come with me.
Please.”
He led me a few feet away from the pit. I could still see the man watching us, arms crossed, like he was waiting for something. “I didn’t want you to know about this,” my husband said, his voice low.
“Because I knew how it would look. But I swear, it’s not illegal. Or dangerous.
Just… complicated.”
I stared at him, confused and scared. “Then explain. Right now.
Or I’m calling the police.”
He rubbed his face, then sighed. “Okay. That guy over there?
His name’s Silviu. We met through a community project a few years ago. He’s ex-military, does some off-grid stuff.
And what we’re doing here is burying packages.”
“Packages?” I repeated. He nodded. “Time capsules.
Not the kind kids make. These are for people who want to leave something behind without it being tied to them. Letters.
Photos. Tokens. He runs a service for it.
Quiet, private.”
That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” I said, folding my arms. “You skipped work for this?”
“I didn’t skip work,” he replied. “I quit.
Two weeks ago. I just didn’t tell you yet.”
Now I really couldn’t breathe. “You what?”
“I was going to tell you once I figured out the next step.
The store laid off half the staff. I figured maybe this was a chance to start something different.”
“With him? In the woods?”
He held my gaze.
“You remember how I used to talk about helping veterans? People dealing with trauma, trying to rebuild quietly? This is that.
Silviu’s been mentoring me. We’re planning to open a retreat—healing through nature, that kind of thing. These ‘burials’ are part of it.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
He’d quit his job, gotten involved in some underground therapy project, and was burying anonymous items in the woods. All without telling me. “You lied to me,” I said.
“Every day for two weeks.”
“I know. And I’m sorry. I just didn’t want to scare you off before I could explain.