I Came Home To My Dad’s Place After A Year Away

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I came home to my dad’s place after a year away. He was happy, but the bathroom sink barely worked—pipes clogged. I asked why he hadn’t fixed it; he just shrugged.

When I tried, he stopped me without explaining. Weeks passed, brushing my teeth in the kitchen drove me crazy. So when he went out, I took the pipes apart—and was stunned when I found a small velvet pouch stuffed deep inside the U-bend.

It was soaked and slimy, but inside were three old, glittering rings. They looked expensive, like antique family heirlooms. My first thought was: why the hell would Dad hide these in the bathroom pipes?

I laid them out on a towel, staring at them as my hands shook. When he came home and saw me holding them, he froze like I’d pulled a gun. “Dad, what are these?” I demanded.

He looked at the rings like they were cursed. “They’re your mother’s,” he whispered. “I thought they were lost.” But something about his tone felt off—more scared than relieved.

I pressed him for answers. He claimed Mom had sold the rings before she died, but I was old enough to remember Mom crying the night before she left us. She was clutching those same rings then.

His story made no sense. When I threatened to take them to a jeweler to check if they were stolen, he broke down. He admitted he’d pawned the rings behind Mom’s back to pay off a gambling debt.

He bought them back years later but couldn’t face giving them to me—he thought I’d hate him forever. So he hid them. It was like he’d carried this secret like an anchor all these years.

I couldn’t believe he’d rather let the sink rot than risk the truth coming out. I didn’t know what to say. Part of me was furious—he’d let his pride and shame keep these memories locked away.

Another part felt sorry for him. He was a lonely man, trying to do right in the wrongest ways possible. I took the rings to a local jeweler to get them cleaned.

The jeweler recognized them immediately. “These belonged to Aurelia Donnellan, didn’t they?” he asked, naming my mother. She was a well-known artist in our town before she passed.

It was like the rings carried a piece of her spirit. The jeweler told me they were worth far more than I thought, both in money and sentiment. That night, Dad and I sat across from each other, the rings polished and glinting on the table.

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