My stepmother never liked me. From the moment she entered my father’s life, it felt as though her mission was to push me further and further away from him. I tried, in the beginning, to be open and welcoming.
I was only seventeen when my father remarried, and while it was hard to accept another woman in his life so soon after my mother’s passing, I didn’t want to be the bitter child holding on to the past. But no matter what I did, she always seemed to see me as an intruder. At first, I told myself it didn’t matter.
My father loved me, and that was enough. We had always been close, the kind of father and child who would stay up late talking about books, dreams, and the future. He never let me feel small or unimportant.
His approval and warmth kept me grounded through the turbulence of grief. But then, things began to change. Slowly.
Subtly. After the wedding, my stepmother, Helen, started with small exclusions. A family dinner without inviting me.
A “forgetful” oversight when sending photos or news. She made decisions for my father and presented them as if they were his, leaving me out of conversations we once had together. I thought maybe I was imagining it, until even my father began repeating her words, phrases I knew didn’t sound like him.
Still, I stayed patient. I visited him every week, no matter how coldly she treated me. My father never stopped welcoming me with a smile, even if she hovered in the background with narrowed eyes.
And then, he got sick. It was fast and cruel. A sudden diagnosis of p.a.n.c.r.3.a.t.i.c c.a.n.c.3.r took him from me within months.
Those final weeks, I fought tooth and nail to be by his side. But Helen never missed an opportunity to cut me out. The worst moment—the one that still burns like acid in my chest—was the night he passed.
She called me only after it was over. I didn’t get to hold his hand. I didn’t get to whisper goodbye.
When I arrived at the hospital, tears streaming down my face, she blocked the doorway with her body. “You don’t need to see him now,” she said, her tone sharp and final. “He’s my father,” I choked out.
“I need to—”
Her lips curved into a small, cold smile. “Your father is gone. Accept it.”
That was the moment something inside me hardened.
I walked away without another word, because I knew if I spoke, the grief would consume me and I would shatter into a million irretrievable pieces. A week later, I found myself outside the offices of my father’s lawyer. The will reading.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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