I didn’t go looking for the truth. It found me.
The photograph slipped from the back of my late mother’s album and landed face down on the living room floor. I almost left it there. Something told me not to. When I turned it over, my sense of identity shattered in a single breath.
Two little girls stared back at me.
One was unmistakably me—about two years old. The other stood slightly taller, maybe four or five. Same eyes. Same mouth. Same expression.
Not similar. Identical.
My name is Nadia. I was fifty years old when I found that photo.
My mother had passed away weeks earlier at eighty-five. It had always been just the two of us. My father died when I was very young, and after that, my mother became my entire world—disciplined, private, endlessly hardworking. She rarely spoke about the past. Some questions simply had no answers.
After the funeral, I stayed behind alone in her house. I needed silence. I needed time. I sorted through closets, drawers, and boxes filled with the weight of memory. Every object felt heavier than it should have.
On the fourth day, I climbed into the attic.
That’s where I found the old photo albums—stacked in a battered box, untouched for years. I brought them downstairs and spread them across the floor, flipping through what I believed was a complete record of my life.
Continue reading on next page…