My parents’ best friend raised me after they died — after his funeral, I found a flash drive and a note that read, “If you want to know what happened to your parents, watch this.” When I was three years old, my parents died in a car accident. I remember almost nothing about them. Thomas had been my father’s best friend since they were children. He was close to my parents, so after their death, he adopted me. He raised me as his own daughter. I never felt alone with him. He read me bedtime stories, came to every school performance, and later walked me down the aisle. Thomas would sometimes tell me about my parents when I asked, but he never went into much detail. He said it was too painful to revisit those memories, because my parents had been like family to him. He never married and never had any other children. I was his whole world, just as he was mine. Last month, he died of cancer. It felt like the ground dropped out from under me. A few days after his funeral, I returned to his house to pack up some of his things. Through the window, I saw an unfamiliar woman quickly slipping something into the mailbox. I ran outside and called out to her, but she disappeared down the street. I opened the mailbox and found an envelope. No name. No stamp. Inside was a note and a flash drive. My hands trembled as I read: “You don’t even know what really happened to your biological parents. Thomas wasn’t who he pretended to be. If you want to know the whole truth, watch the flash drive.” My heart pounded. I pulled the flash drive from the envelope. Honestly, I was scared. But my curiosity got the better of me. I ran inside and immediately plugged it into my laptop. I almost fainted when I opened the files.

The one I painted for him as a kid—crooked flowers, uneven colors. He never stopped using it.

I picked it up, and my hands started shaking.

“Who were you… really?” I whispered.

Memories flooded in, uninvited.

Him sitting in the front row at every school event.

Him staying awake all night when I was sick.

Him fixing my veil on my wedding day, hands trembling, telling me my parents would be proud.

There was nothing fake about those moments.

Nothing.

And yet…

he never told me what really happened that night.

Every time I asked, he would shut down.

“It’s too painful,” he’d say.

And I believed him.

Because I loved him.

But now—

that silence felt different.

Not like grief.

Like something else.

Something heavier.

I needed answers.

I went back to the footage from the doorbell camera.

The woman who left the envelope—same coat, same scarf. I tracked her down through the car she drove.

Her name was Amanda.

I didn’t think.

I just drove.

Her house was quiet. Too quiet.

When she opened the door and saw me, her face changed instantly.

Like she had been expecting this moment… and dreading it.

“You left something for me,” I said.

She didn’t deny it.

She just stepped aside.

We sat across from each other in a small room.

Neither of us spoke at first.

Then I asked:

“Who are you?”

Her answer hit harder than anything else so far.

“I was supposed to marry Thomas.”

Everything inside me paused.

She told me everything after that.

Slowly. Carefully. Like every word mattered.

That day—the day my parents died—

Thomas was driving.

My father was in the passenger seat.

My mother was in the back.

They were on their way to meet her.

There was a curve in the road.

The car lost control.

And everything ended in seconds.

Thomas survived.

My parents didn’t.

I felt like I was watching someone else’s life unfold.

Not mine.

“Was it his fault?” I asked.

My voice didn’t even sound like mine anymore.

She shook her head.

“No.”

The brakes had failed.

Completely.

There was nothing he could have done.

But Thomas never believed that.

He carried it.

Every version of “what if.”

Every possible way he could’ve done something differently.

Every second.

For the rest of his life.

And then came the part that broke something in me completely.

After the accident, there was a call.

No family.

No one to take me.

I would’ve gone into the system.

He refused.

He told Amanda they would adopt me.

Together.

She said no.

She couldn’t do it.

Couldn’t carry that kind of life.

That kind of responsibility.

That kind of pain.

So he made a choice.

He chose me.

He ended his engagement.

Walked away from his future.

And built a new one around a child that wasn’t his.

Me.

I sat there, numb.

Not crying.

Not speaking.

Just… existing in the middle of everything collapsing and rebuilding at the same time.

“I didn’t tell you to destroy him,” Amanda said quietly.

“I told you because you deserved to know what it cost him to love you.”

That sentence stayed with me.

 

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