The man at my door had hard eyes and a crooked smile. He didn’t introduce himself so much as drop a bomb: “It’s me.
Your father. I’m here to claim half of everything you own.”
I stared at him, stunned. This was the man who’d vanished from my life twenty-five years ago,
the ghost from my foster care nightmares. He spoke like I should thank him for “letting me go” so I could be “adopted by a rich family.”
I laughed bitterly. “You abandoned me. You didn’t give me a future—you gave me scars.”
Before he could reply, my husband Daniel appeared, our toddler’s toy in one hand.
His voice was calm but sharp as a blade.
“She wasn’t adopted by a rich family.
She was dumped into foster care.
We met there, fought our way out together,
and built this life from nothing.
You don’t get to rewrite history or take a dime from her.”
The man faltered, his arrogance draining away. Daniel stepped closer.
“She owes you nothing. Now get off my property.” Shoulders slumped,
my so-called father left. When Daniel shut the door, I crumbled into his arms.
He kissed my hair. “You built this life.
We built it. And no one—especially him—gets to take that away.”