Two years ago, cancer took my mother.
Gary and I didn’t grow closer, not in the way some would expect. We didn’t cry in each other’s arms or start new traditions. But he was there. He showed up at the funeral in a suit too tight at the shoulders, carrying the weight of grief in silence. Afterward, we spoke occasionally—birthdays, holidays, quiet check-ins.
The Card, the Book, the Lemon Bars
Now 25 and living out of state, I had finally reached the point where I was ready to say it all. I spent hours writing the card—more letter than greeting, really. I poured my heart into it. “You weren’t my father by blood,” I wrote, “but you showed up. You stayed. You mattered.”
I signed it “With love, always — Jenna.”
Alongside it, I packed a first-edition WWII book he’d once said he wanted, and a container of my mother’s lemon bars—the recipe she’d taught me on a rainy day in 2008, hands sticky with sugar and memory.
The Words I Was Never Meant to Hear
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