She opened the box and pulled out neat folders, a photograph on top.
A young couple, rich-looking, polished, standing in front of a big house. They looked like a magazine ad.
“These are his biological parents,” Marianne said.
Something inside me went cold.
“Why are you here now?” Harold asked.
My hands shook as I picked it up.
“They died a few years ago,” she said. “Car accident. Old money, very well-known family, the kind that cares a lot about image.”
She slid a letter toward me.
“In their will, they left everything to their child. Julian. The one they abandoned.”
My hands shook as I picked it up.
“Why did they abandon him in the first place?” I asked.
Marianne didn’t argue.
“There were complications at birth,” Marianne said. “Doctors warned there might be long-term health issues. Nothing certain. Just risk. They panicked. They didn’t want a ‘problem.’ So they got rid of the problem in secret.”
“By dumping a baby outside in the middle of winter,” Harold said.
Marianne didn’t argue.
“I’m not here to defend them,” she said. “I’m here because their estate still exists. And because Julian has known about all this for years. And you haven’t.”
“I contacted him first.”
I stared at her.
“He knew?” I whispered.
She nodded.
“I contacted him first,” she said. “We did DNA tests. He read everything. And then he said something that shocked me.”
She paused.
“He said, ‘They don’t get to be my parents just because they left me money.'”
“You have a right to know.”
My eyes burned.
“So he refused?” Harold asked.
“He refused to acknowledge them legally,” she said. “To take their name. To attend any memorials. He wouldn’t call them his parents. He asked me to give him time before involving you.”
She closed the folders and put them back in the box.
“I’ve given him years,” she said. “But this isn’t just his burden. You have a right to know.”
Harold and I just stared at the box.
She pushed the box toward me.
“This belongs to you as much as to him,” she said. “Read it or don’t. But talk to your son.”
Then she left.
The house felt weirdly loud afterward. The clock ticking, the fridge humming, my heartbeat in my ears.
Harold and I just stared at the box.
Finally he said, “Call him.”
“Marianne came by, didn’t she?”
So I did.
“Hey, Mom,” Julian said. “What’s up?”
“Can you come over for dinner?” I asked. “Today.”
There was a pause.
“Marianne came by, didn’t she?” he said.
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