I had always imagined the beginning of my new life with Eric as a fairytale. Moving into his house felt like the first chapter of a beautiful future — our future. The house was quiet without him; he’d been away on a business trip for nearly two weeks.
Still, I didn’t mind. I was busy nesting, decorating, and creating a home that would soon be ours together. But fairytales don’t come with yellow suitcases.
Yesterday started like any other day. I spent the afternoon in town, shopping for curtains and picture frames, humming to myself about how I’d surprise Eric with my little touches around the house. The sun had dipped just below the trees by the time I returned home, casting golden shadows across the driveway.
That’s when I saw it. A massive, canary-yellow suitcase sat right at the doorstep, like an uninvited guest too bold to knock. It was impossible to miss — bright, clean, almost new-looking.
But it was the note taped to the handle that made my stomach twist. “Open and run.”
Three words. Chilling and strange.
I froze. A dozen scenarios flashed through my mind. Was it some twisted prank?
A threat? My instincts screamed at me to call someone — the police, maybe even Eric. But something stronger than fear pulled me in.
Curiosity, dread, instinct… I don’t know. My fingers trembled as I reached for the zipper. It opened with a hiss, like the suitcase exhaling secrets it had held too long.
Inside wasn’t what I expected. No explosives. No dangerous contraband.
But what I found was worse. Photographs — hundreds of them — meticulously organized in envelopes and bound with twine. Letters, handwritten and stained with tears or coffee or time.
Trinkets, ticket stubs, pressed flowers, even a bracelet I recognized — because I had the same one. A matching pair. Eric had given it to me months ago.
Apparently, I wasn’t the only one. My breath caught in my throat. The photos told a story I had never been told — Eric’s second life.
In them, he looked younger, freer, happier. He was with a woman I didn’t recognize. Her auburn hair curled around his face as they posed cheek to cheek.
There were beach trips, candlelit dinners, birthdays, even vacations I never knew he’d taken. And then I found the letters. The handwriting was hers.
She wrote to him like a woman in love — passionately, longingly, desperately. Each letter was dated. Some were months old.
Some were from last week. In one, she mentioned me by name. “She’s still there, isn’t she?
Still playing house in the home that was supposed to be ours. I’m tired of being the secret, Eric. Either you tell her, or I will.”
It hit me like a freight train.
The words blurred as tears welled in my eyes. I dropped the letter, staggered back, and leaned against the doorframe to steady myself. Was this her doing?
Had she sent the suitcase? Delivered it herself, maybe while I was out? Why now?
I sat on the cold step, knees pulled to my chest, as the world tilted. The man I was about to marry had been living a double life. And she was done waiting.