Thomas was never our biological father, yet he raised five children as if we had always belonged to him. After marrying my mother when I was five, he stayed by my side even after she died two years later.
While everyone expected me to be sent away to relatives, Thomas fought to keep me and simply said, “She’s my daughter.”
Over the years, our family grew through adoption and foster care. Michael and Mara arrived first, followed later by Noah and Susan, turning our once-quiet house into a loud and chaotic home filled with love.
Thomas worked endlessly to provide for us, never complaining about exhaustion, money, or sacrifice.
But Susan changed everything when she turned eighteen. Without warning, she moved out, cut contact with Thomas, and refused to explain why she suddenly hated the man who raised us.
Whenever I asked, she would only say, “You don’t know him the way I do.”
At Thomas’s funeral, Susan stood silently in the back row dressed in black, avoiding everyone. After the service, the family lawyer gathered us around a locked wooden box containing five sealed letters written in Thomas’s shaky handwriting.
My hands trembled as I opened mine and read the sentence that instantly made my stomach drop.
“My sweet girl,” the letter began, “Susan left because she discovered something about me the rest of you never knew.” Thomas went on to confess that years earlier, before adopting any of us, he had once made a terrible mistake that haunted him forever.
The letters revealed hidden truths, painful regrets, and the secret reason Susan could never forgive the man we believed was our hero.