When my brother Harold died, I thought grief would be the hardest part. I was wrong.
Weeks later, I found a note hidden in his old barn: “Chest. Left corner. What I never said, brother.”
Inside, a letter revealed everything—Sara had loved me, not Harold. And Ellison, the daughter he raised, was biologically mine.
I remembered the laughter, the wedding arch, the silence when Sara chose him. I never truly loved again. When she died, Harold began to fade. I came to care for him. I never left.
He whispered on his deathbed, “Stay here, Ray. Reach Ellison. She doesn’t know… everything.”
At the lawyer’s office, Ellison was cold. The will gave her the farm—with one condition: I stay, and she can’t sell without my consent. She threatened to make life difficult.
Then, she too found a letter from Harold. We read in silence.
“He always knew,” she said.
“He did. And he loved you still.”
“I thought I didn’t matter.”
“You always did,” I replied. “You were mine.”
Ellison smiled. “Weekends, holidays. I’ll come home.”
“Even with the chickens?”
She laughed. And we began again—father and daughter.