I was thirty-two years old when I learned that I was never truly an orphan. By that point, I believed I had already buried three people: my mother, my father, and later my grandmother. At least, that was the story I had lived with.
The letter arrived three days after her funeral.
The kitchen looked exactly the same.
The same chipped table.
The same outdated vinyl floor.
The same empty chair, her cardigan still draped over the back like she might return at any moment.
The air carried dust and a faint trace of cinnamon, as if the house itself was trying not to forget her.
I filled the kettle and set out two cups—out of habit.
The envelope lay in front of me, my name handwritten on the front.
I stared at it for a full minute.
“No,” I whispered. “That’s impossible.”
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