The third letter arrived on a Sunday, slid under his apartment door while he was in the shower. No envelope this time. Just the paper, folded in half, lying on the gray carpet like a fallen leaf.

Will stood in the doorway, dripping onto the floor, and felt something crack open in his chest—something he’d sealed with epoxy and denial a long time ago. He thought of Sam’s fishing rod, still leaning in the corner of the old cabin’s porch. He thought of the Polaroid camera they’d found at a yard sale, the one that spat out blurry, overexposed memories. He thought of the night his father had said, “Some things are better left at the bottom.”

Will Harper, who had not cried since he was twelve years old, sat down in a dusty armchair and wept. Because he knew. He had always known. He had just been so very, very good at silence.

Sam didn’t drown.

Mr. Harper, You don’t know me. But I know what you did in the summer of 1998. And I think it’s time you came home.