My Father’s Best Friend Raised Me Like His Own – After His Funeral, I Received a Note That Said, ‘He Wasn’t Who He Pretended to Be’

My Father’s Best Friend Raised Me Like His Own – After His Funeral, I Received a Note That Said, ‘He Wasn’t Who He Pretended to Be’

Last month, I buried the man who chose to adopt me when I was three years old. He gave me his name, his love, and everything a daughter could wish for. Three days after the funeral, an envelope appeared in his mailbox that challenged everything I believed about the night my parents died.

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Thomas’s house felt wrong without him in it. He was my dad. And he was a great Dad.

The furniture was exactly where it had always been. His reading glasses were folded on the side table.

His coffee mug, the ugly one I’d painted for him in third grade with lopsided flowers and all, was still sitting on the kitchen counter right where he’d left it.

He was a great Dad.

But the house felt hollow, like a stage set where all the props remained and the only person who made them matter had simply walked off.

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I’d come to start packing Dad’s things. Three days after burying him, I still hadn’t put a single item in a box.

I was standing in the living room holding an empty cardboard box, just staring at his bookshelf, when movement outside the front window stopped me cold.

A woman. Late 50s, maybe. Dark coat, scarf pulled high around her jaw. She was moving quickly toward the mailbox at the end of the front path.

I’d come to start packing Dad’s things.

She glanced back at the house once, slid something inside, and turned away.

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Something about the way she moved made my stomach clench hard.

I was out the front door before I had even consciously decided to move.

“Hey!” I called. “Excuse me! Hey!”

She didn’t stop. She didn’t even flinch. By the time I reached the end of the front path, she’d turned the corner and disappeared.

Something about the way she moved made my stomach clench hard.

I stood on the sidewalk, breathing hard. Then I turned and opened the mailbox.

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One envelope. No name on the front. No stamp. No return address.

With trembling hands, I pulled out what was inside: a folded handwritten note and a small black flash drive.

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