When my father d.i.3.d, I believed grief had already taken everything it could from me. I was wrong. It still had one more revelation waiting, one that would force me to question everything I thought I knew about my family, my past, and myself.
The morning of the will reading was soaked in rain, the kind that fell in steady sheets and made the whole city feel heavy and subdued. I pulled my coat tighter around my shoulders as I walked toward the notary’s office, my shoes splashing through shallow puddles on the sidewalk. Each step felt like I was walking farther away from the life I had known.
My father had been my anchor for as long as I could remember. After my mother d.i.3.d when I was very young, he became everything. Provider, protector, confidant.
Or at least, that was how it had always seemed. In the last few years of his life, though, the cracks began to show. Medical bills piled up.
Old debts resurfaced. The small house we shared, the one filled with memories of quiet dinners and late-night conversations, was slipping through our fingers. By the time he passed, foreclosure notices were already taped to the door.
I had spent weeks preparing myself for the inevitable. There would be nothing left. No inheritance.
No safety net. Just grief and the knowledge that I would have to rebuild my life from the ground up. Inside the notary’s office, the air smelled faintly of paper and old furniture polish.
The man behind the desk was polite but detached, clearly accustomed to scenes like this. He gestured for me to sit and began sorting through a thick stack of documents. As he read aloud, his voice faded into the background.
My thoughts drifted to my father’s laugh, the way he used to hum off-key while cooking, the gentle reassurance in his eyes whenever life felt overwhelming. He had always told me there were no secrets between us. I had believed him without question.
Then the word “house” cut sharply through my thoughts. I looked up so fast my neck hurt. “I’m sorry,” I said, my voice unsteady.
“Did you just say a house?”
The notary nodded calmly and slid a document across the desk. “Yes. A property your father owned.
Not the residence you lived in together.”
I stared at the paper, my pulse roaring in my ears. Another house. An address I didn’t recognize.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
