Rebecca Lane Info

Rebecca felt a strange pull. She closed the shop early and drove toward the coast, where the dense cedar forests of the Pacific Northwest finally gave way to the spray of the Pacific.

For the rest of the afternoon, the shop’s flickering neon 'Open' sign was forgotten. Rebecca became a detective of the mundane. She traced the locket back to a local estate sale—the Miller house on the edge of the marshes. Using the town’s digitized census records, she found a Martha Miller who had lived in that house for eighty years, unmarried, until her passing last month.

Rebecca was an accidental archivist. She hadn’t intended to spend her thirties cataloging the forgotten junk of a dying town, but when her grandfather left her the shop, she found she couldn’t bear to let the stories inside go to the landfill. rebecca lane

She found the spot—a weathered pier where the trees literally hung over the tide line. It was quiet, save for the gulls. There, carved into the railing of the old lookout, were two sets of initials: RL + MM .

She looked back at the locket. She hadn’t just found a piece of history; she had found the reason her grandfather had always looked at the sea with such quiet, persistent longing. He hadn't been waiting for a ship; he had been waiting for a girl who never came. Rebecca felt a strange pull

As the sun dipped below the horizon, Rebecca Lane sat on the salt-stained wood. She couldn't change the past, but she decided then that she’d stop just being a curator of other people's endings. It was time to start a chapter that didn't end up in a box.

“Meet me where the salt meets the cedar. May 12th. I’m not coming back without you.” Rebecca checked the date on the back of the photo: 1944. Rebecca became a detective of the mundane

She was currently elbow-deep in a box of "Assorted Textiles" when she found it: a small, velvet-lined case containing a silver locket. It wasn't the jewelry that caught her eye, but the folded scrap of parchment tucked behind the photo of a stern-faced sailor.