When Nadia’s father passes, his last gift is meant to honor her sacrifices. But when her sister, Emily, steals what isn’t hers to fund a wedding drenched in excess, Nadia refuses to stay silent. On the night Emily hopes to be celebrated, Nadia arrives with a “gift” that no one would ever forget…
When my father, Richard, passed away last year, the world tilted on its axis.
I was 28, but the grief hollowed me out until I was like a child again.
Losing him felt as though the ground had been ripped out from beneath me, and suddenly the air itself seemed thinner and harder to draw into my lungs.
He had always been my anchor. He wasn’t simply a father in the traditional sense.
No, Richard was my confidant, my teacher, my biggest supporter, and the gentlest soul I had ever known.
He was the kind of man who remembered every birthday and anniversary, not with expensive gifts but with handwritten notes tucked under my coffee mug, or phone calls that began with, “I just wanted to hear your voice.”
Even during our hardest years, my father made space for joy. Whenever money was tight, he didn’t complain.
Instead, he found small ways to make ordinary days feel special.
Sometimes that meant a late-night drive with the windows down and the radio turned up, just to chase away the weight of silence.
Other times, it was a simple joke slipped into a conversation when he knew I was overwhelmed, his eyes twinkling with mischief as he waited for me to laugh.
When I was in college, working shifts at the local gas station store, he would stop by my tiny apartment with takeout containers balanced in one hand and a tired but genuine smile on his face.
“You can’t think on an empty stomach, kiddo,” he’d say, setting the food down before pulling me into a hug that always lasted a beat longer than I expected.
It wasn’t just the food — it was my dad’s way of reminding me that no matter how thinly stretched I felt , I was never truly alone.
…The story doesn’t end here, it continues on the next page 👇

