Chapter 2: The Letter That Changed Everything
We did not open the box at the cemetery.
None of us could.
There are moments when grief makes even a small wooden latch feel heavier than stone.
So we followed the lawyer to his office in silence, still damp from the rain, still smelling of wet wool, cemetery flowers, and the cold earth that had just swallowed the only father most of us had ever known.
The office was too warm.
Too quiet.
Susan stood near the window, her arms wrapped tightly around herself. For years, I had remembered her as the woman who left us. The woman who walked away from Thomas. The woman who abandoned a house full of children who had already known abandonment once.
I had hated her for that.
Maybe we all had.
The lawyer opened the box.
Inside were five letters.
Each one had a name written across the front in Thomas’s careful, uneven handwriting.
Mine was first.
My hands trembled as I unfolded the paper.
“My sweet girl,” it began, “Susan left because she discovered something about me the rest of you never knew.”
The words struck harder than the rain, and suddenly every old certainty I had carried about our family began to crack… Continue Reading ⬇️
