My throat tightened.

“He really said that?”

“Clear as day,” Jack replied. “Oh, and he said you should check under the kitchen floorboard when you’re ready.”

He tipped his cap and started down the steps before I could ask another question.

I shut the door, the stew heavy in my hands, and stood there in silence. Dad had known this was coming. He’d prepared for it. And now here I was, holding his message like some coded mission brief.

I set the stew on the counter and dropped to my knees by the kitchen table. The boards were old pine, scuffed from decades of boots and chairs. Running my hand along the floor, I found one plank that shifted slightly. My heart raced. I pried it up with a pocketknife, and sure enough, there was a metal box wrapped in oil cloth.

I carried it to the table, wiped the dust off, and opened it.

Inside were papers, photographs, and a letter addressed to me in Dad’s handwriting. But what stopped me cold was the geological survey tucked underneath. My military training had me scanning numbers and summaries fast. Words jumped out: granite, feldspar, high yield, estimated commercial value substantial.