My Uncle Raised Me After My Parents Died – Until His Death Revealed the Truth He’d Hidden for Years
“No,” Ray said.
She blinked. “Sir—”
“I’m taking her. I’m not handing her to strangers. She’s mine.”
He brought me home to his small house that smelled like coffee.
He shuffled into my room, hair sticking up.
He didn’t have kids. Or a partner. Or a clue.
So he learned. He watched the nurses, then copied everything they did. Wrote notes in a beat-up notebook. How to roll me without hurting me. How to check my skin. How to lift me like I was heavy and fragile at once.
The first night home, his alarm went off every two hours.
He shuffled into my room, hair sticking up.
“Pancake time,” he muttered, gently rolling me.
He fought with insurance on speakerphone, pacing the kitchen.
I whimpered.
“I know,” he whispered. “I got you, kiddo.”
He built a plywood ramp so my wheelchair could clear the front door. It wasn’t pretty, but it worked.
He fought with insurance on speakerphone, pacing the kitchen.
“No, she can’t ‘make do’ without a shower chair,” he said. “You want to tell her that yourself?”
They didn’t.
He took me to the park.
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