“Did you know it would end like this?” she asked, her voice softer than I’d ever heard it.
“No,” I said. “I expected him to honor what he signed.”
She looked down. “He told us he bought this house.”
I met her eyes.
“That version of the story was never true.”
She nodded slowly, something in her finally shifting.
“I should have asked,” she said.
“Yes,” I replied. “You should have.”
I watched her walk back to Hudson’s car. He sat behind the wheel, staring forward, the weight of everything finally visible on his face.
Not grief.
Not regret.
Just the collapse of a story he had believed for too long.
I didn’t stay to see more.
I moved into a smaller place in Oak Grove.
Quiet streets. Trees. A porch where the mornings feel like they belong to me.
Every document I signed had only my name on it.
No explanations. No corrections.
Just truth.
There’s a photo of my father in my study now.
Sometimes I sit there with my coffee and think about how that money—born from something I would have given anything to undo—came back to me in a way I never expected.
Not as a victory.
But as something steadier.
A reminder that I was never invisible.
Not to him.
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