The Basement Drawer Held 35 Years of Staircase Photos — And Every One Had Her Closer-QuynhTranJP

The phone showed her standing on the third step.

Not the bottom anymore.

Not the first.

Image

The third.

Grandma’s back blocked the staircase, but the image in my hand showed the woman moving as if the photograph had become the real hallway and the hallway had become the lie.

My mother’s bedroom door stayed open at the top landing.

No one called out.

No sleepy voice asked what we were doing.

Only the old house answered us — radiator hiss, snow tapping glass, wood shrinking in the cold, one slow creak from above that sounded like a bare foot testing a floorboard.

Grandma tightened her grip on the banister.

“Basement,” she said without looking at me. “Now.”

I did not argue. The brass key pressed into my palm, its red thread damp from her pocket. I backed away from the stairs with my phone held low, screen facing my leg, because some animal part of me understood I should not let that woman see herself being watched.

At the kitchen doorway, I glanced back.

Grandma had not moved.

She stood at the foot of the stairs in her blue robe, shoulders narrow, spine straight, silver braid hanging down her back. The ruby ring on her left hand caught one line of moonlight.

The phone in my hand buzzed once.

I looked down.

The photo had changed again.

Now the woman stood behind Grandma.

Her wet hair touched Grandma’s shoulder.

I nearly dropped the phone a second time.

Grandma spoke before I made a sound.

“Do not say her name.”

I had not known I knew one.

That was the first thing that made my knees weaken. Not the staircase. Not the woman. Not even the ring.

The name was sitting behind my teeth like it had been waiting there for years.

Evelyn.

I swallowed it.

The basement door was beside the pantry, painted the same dull white as the wall. I had passed it every Christmas of my life and never wondered why Grandma kept a chair wedged under the knob after sunset.

The chair was already gone.

That frightened me more than the lock.

The basement smelled like clay, old paper, mouse traps, and the sharp mineral cold of stone. A single bulb swung from a pull chain, clicking softly against its own glass. Each wooden step stuck to the bottom of my socks with a tacky, dust-thick pull.

Behind me, upstairs, Grandma said one calm sentence.

“You have until she reaches the fifth.”

I went down faster.

Read More