I called my mother the following afternoon, my hands shaking as I gripped the phone.
“Mom, can you come over? Now. Please.”
She arrived 20 minutes later. She barely glanced at me before her gaze landed on the box at the table.
“What’s going on, Tanya? Are the girls okay?”
I called my mother.
“No, the girls are fine,” I said. I slid the photo and the letter across to her. “I found these under Mr. Whitmore’s apple tree.”
My mother reached for the photo. “Why were you digging in his yard?”
“He asked me to. After the funeral, I got a letter. He wanted me to know the truth.”
I watched my mother’s face as she read. I watched the color drain.
She clutched the letter. “Where did you… How long have you known?”
“Why were you digging in his yard?”
“Just since yesterday. Why, Mom? Why didn’t you ever tell me?” I tried to keep my voice calm, but it cracked. “You let him live right next door all this time.”
She dropped into a chair, tears shining.
“I was 19. My parents said he’d ruin my life. They made me choose: keep you, or keep him around. They threatened to throw me out, to shame us all. I… I did what they wanted.”
“Why didn’t you ever tell me?”
“So you cut him out? For them?” My heart hammered as I pressed on. “He missed everything. My birthdays, graduations… Did you ever think about what that did to me? Or to him?”
My mother’s shoulder shook. “I thought I was protecting you. I thought if I kept him away, you’d have a better life. A normal life, with my parents’ support.”
“You did it to protect yourself, Mom. You buried the truth, and you let me live right next to it without knowing.”
She wiped her face, mascara smudging. “I’m sorry, honey. I really am. I thought I could make it go away.”
“So you cut him out? For them?”
“You can’t bury someone forever, Mom. Not really. It always comes up again; you taught me that. My father left a letter for you, too.”
I tapped the sealed envelope on the table.
“You can tell the family, Mom, or I’ll read his words at dinner on Saturday.”
She started to cry, but I didn’t move.
For once, I wasn’t the one cleaning up the mess.
“My father left a letter for you, too.”
The day after the truth broke, I sat at my kitchen table, head in my hands, staring at my mother’s number on my phone. For years, decades, I’d asked her about my father. I’d begged for details.
“He left us,” she’d always say, voice flat, never looking me in the eye. “He wasn’t cut out for family.”
She said it so many times, I learned to stop asking. Now I could hardly breathe for all the questions pressing on my chest.
I’d begged for details.
When I called her again, she picked up right away. “Tanya?”
“Did you ever think about telling me? The truth?”
She was silent.
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