The day of my father’s funeral, I expected to be shattered, and I was drowning in grief. What I didn’t expect was a letter from his lawyer — one that held a crushing truth that would change everything I thought I knew about my family. Grief is a strange thing.
It dulls the world and makes everything feel unreal…
like you’re moving through a fog while everyone else breathes just fine. The morning started with me staring at Dad’s picture on my dresser, my fingers tracing his smile.
“I can’t do this today, Dad,” I cried. “I can’t say goodbye.”
The day of my father’s funeral, I expected pain.
I expected the hollow ache in my chest and the unbearable weight of loss pressing down on me with every breath.
I expected the condolences and the murmured “I’m so sorry” from people who barely knew him. What I didn’t expect was a LETTER. Just as the priest cleared his throat to begin, a hand touched my shoulder.
I turned, startled, and found my father’s lawyer standing there.
“It’s from your dad,” he murmured, slipping a sealed envelope into my hands before disappearing back into the crowd. My hands shook as I stared at the envelope, my father’s familiar handwriting on the front — the same handwriting that had signed my birthday cards, written notes in my lunchbox, and penned encouraging messages during my college finals.
I stepped away from the gathering, finding a quiet corner. My fingers trembled as I carefully opened it, the paper feeling somehow sacred.
My pulse quickened, tears blurring the words as I started reading:
“My sweet girl,
If you’re reading this, it means I’m gone.
But I need you to do something for me… something important. During my funeral, I want you to watch Lora and the kids carefully.
Pay attention to where they go afterward.
Then, follow them. But do so quietly.
Don’t let them see you. You need to know the truth.”
I swallowed hard.
A thousand memories flooded back — awkward family dinners, stilted conversations, and careful politeness that never quite warmed into love.
My stepmother, Lora, had always been polite and cordial. But she was never warm or loving. She kept me at arm’s length, and I did the same.
Her kids were the same way.
And now, my father was asking me to spy on them? Why?
I hesitated. Was this some kind of warning?
A secret he hadn’t told me?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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