“I want to talk,” he said, voice shaking. “I made a mistake.”
I stared at him in silence.
“I found something,” he continued. “Something that… that made me realize I was wrong.”
I laughed—sharp and humorless.
“Fifteen years too late.”
But he begged. He said he’d been haunted. That he’d never married again. That guilt had eaten him alive.
Against my better judgment, I let him inside.
The children were in the living room. Five teenagers—tall, confident, unmistakably Black—laughed over something on a laptop.
He froze.
“They look just like you,” he murmured. “But still…”
I crossed my arms. “Still not yours?”
He swallowed. “I want proof.”
I nodded. I had expected this.
“I already have it,” I said.
I reached into a drawer and placed a thick envelope on the table.
He frowned. “What’s this?”
“Medical records,” I said calmly. “From the hospital. From before the birth. From years ago.”
He opened the envelope, hands trembling.
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