At my mother’s funeral, the priest told me my last name was a lie, handed me a storage key, and warned me not to go home.-iwachan

The first line of my mother’s letter was not gentle.

If Thomas finds this before you do, run.

I read it once, then again, because grief does strange things to language.

Image

Sometimes words arrive before your mind lets them in.

The storage unit smelled like dust, hot metal, and old cardboard.

Outside, someone’s pickup rolled slowly past the row of orange doors.

Inside, my mother was alive only in ink.

My phone lit up again beside my polished shoe.

Thomas.

Come home. Now.

I picked up the phone, stared at the message, and set it face down on the concrete.

For the first time in my life, I ignored an order from that man.

The envelope held more than one paper.

Birth certificate.

Marriage certificate.

Court documents.

Photographs.

A folded Marine Corps commendation letter with a crease down the center.

My hands were steady because the Army teaches that.

The rest of me was not.

The birth certificate was mine.

Same hospital.

Same date.

Same mother.

But where I had always seen Thomas Brooks listed as father, this one said Daniel James Mercer.

The name looked impossible on paper.

Like someone had taken my life and written the truth underneath it in a different hand.

Behind it was a photograph.

My mother was younger than I had ever known her.

She stood outside a small house with faded blue siding, one hand on her pregnant stomach.

Beside her stood a Marine in dress blues.

Daniel Mercer.

My father.

I knew it before I turned the picture over.

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