He laughed again. “And the kid? Just part of the deal.
I stood frozen. The man I was about to thank—the man I believed had filled the space my father left behind—had been performing. For ten years.
Every birthday, every meal, every quiet moment of kindness. Manufactured. Then came the worst of it.
I trashed every single one.”
I felt the world tilt. I didn’t even know he’d written. Letters from my father—thrown away, unread, hidden from me forever.
He knew. “You meant what you said?” I asked, holding back the crack in my voice. He stammered.
“No,” I said. “Don’t you dare.
I reached into my bag and pulled out the card—the one written with love, hope, and hard-earned trust.
I dropped it on the floor between us. “Add it to your collection of lies.”
I told no one. I barely slept. I couldn’t eat the lemon bars I had brought home.
They tasted like betrayal. Eventually, I contacted my mother’s attorney and requested a copy of her will. Something in me needed answers—needed control, maybe justice.
Your mother left everything to you.”
It had never been his. The Return
I drove back two weeks later, lemon bars left behind, paperwork in hand. I knocked on the same door, stood on the same porch, but this time, I was steady.
Gary answered. Pale. Quiet.
“I need to talk to you,” I said. “This house isn’t yours. It never was.”
I handed him the legal documents.
He read them without a word. And then he did something I didn’t expect. He nodded.
No anger. No protest. He packed his things over the next three days and left without a fight.
The last time I saw him, he didn’t say goodbye. He just looked at me, as if searching for something he never truly had. Reclaiming My Story
It’s been months now.
I still think about what he said, what he did, and what he took. I wonder what those letters might’ve said. I wonder what my real father might’ve been like. Continue reading…