Leo stared at the words for a full five minutes. His mother had been meticulous, methodical, a woman who color-coded her spice rack. She did not write cryptic notes. She did not hide keys. And yet, here was proof otherwise.
The depot was empty except for a flickering fluorescent light and a single bus, engine humming like a sleeping animal. The driver, a woman with silver dreadlocks and eyes that seemed to hold distant thunder, didn’t ask for a ticket. She just nodded at the key.
“You found the key,” she said. “Now you have to decide. Stay on the bus, and it takes you back to your lists, your Wednesdays, your Sundays. Or step off, and see where the road goes.”
He had no list. No plan. No return address. the unexpected journey
But he was already breaking his own rules. What was one more?
His hand trembled on the rail. The girl with the violin began to play—a soft, aching melody that reminded him of something he’d never heard. The fog parted around the clearing like curtains.
Then the bus stopped. Not at a shelter, but in the middle of a forest clearing bathed in moonlight. The driver stood and turned to face him. Leo stared at the words for a full five minutes
For the first time in his life, Leo smiled and walked straight into the unknown.
Terminus was a bus depot. The grimy, forgotten one on the edge of town where the number 47—the “ghost route,” locals called it—still ran once a night. Leo had never ridden it. No one had, as far as he knew.
Behind him, the doors hissed shut. The bus vanished into the mist without a sound. Ahead, a dirt path wound toward a horizon shimmering with impossible colors: green like lightning, gold like honey, red like a heart still learning to beat. She did not hide keys
So when the letter arrived—a crumpled, coffee-stained envelope with no return address—his first instinct was to file it under “M” for Mistake. But the handwriting on the front was his mother’s, and she had been gone for three years.
By the time he reached his childhood home—a small, overgrown cottage two towns over—it was nearly dusk. The key, a tarnished brass thing, was exactly where she’d said. It opened nothing in the house. No lock, no box, no drawer. Frustrated and strangely excited, Leo turned it over in his palm. Etched into the back was a single word: Terminus.
Leo sat near the back. The bus pulled away from the curb and into a fog so thick it swallowed the streetlights. Minutes passed—or perhaps hours; his watch had stopped. The other passengers materialized one by one: a girl with a violin case, a man in a soaked military coat, an old woman knitting a scarf that never grew longer. None of them spoke.
Inside was a single sentence: The key is under the loose floorboard in your old closet. Don’t wait.
Leo thought of his mother. Had she stepped off, once? Had there been a journey she never told him about, a life tucked between the lines of her careful days?