Now 25 and living out of state, I had finally reached the point where I was ready to say it all. I spent hours writing the card—more letter than greeting, really. I poured my heart into it. “You weren’t my father by blood,” I wrote, “but you showed up. You stayed. You mattered.”
I signed it “With love, always — Jenna.”
Alongside it, I packed a first-edition WWII book he’d once said he wanted, and a container of my mother’s lemon bars—the recipe she’d taught me on a rainy day in 2008, hands sticky with sugar and memory.
The Words I Was Never Meant to Hear
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