After Laura passed, things didn’t just fall apart emotionally. They collapsed financially, too. I started uncovering things I didn’t know existed—debts, overdue bills, accounts tied to decisions she never told me about. At first, I thought I could manage it. I tried. I really did. But every time I thought I was catching up, something else surfaced. It didn’t take long before I realized I was in deeper than I understood.”
I glanced up at him, then continued.
“The house wasn’t secure, the savings weren’t real, even the insurance I thought would help… wasn’t enough. Everything was at risk. I panicked. I couldn’t see a way out that didn’t drag the girls down with me. I didn’t want them to lose what little stability they had left. I made a decision I told myself was for them.”
My grip tightened on the paper.
Edwin explained that leaving them with me—someone steady and stable—felt like the only way to give them a real chance at a normal life.
He believed staying would pull them into something unstable, so he walked away, thinking it would protect them.
I exhaled slowly. His words didn’t make it easier—but they made it clearer.
I kept reading.
“I know how this looks and what you had to carry because of me. There’s no version of this where I come out right.”
For the first time since he arrived, I heard his voice, quiet, almost under his breath.
“I meant everything in there.”
I didn’t look at him.
I turned the page.
There were more documents with the letter—formal ones.
I flipped through them, then paused. Every page had recent dates and referenced accounts, properties, and balances. Three words stood out:
Cleared.
Settled.
Reclaimed.
I looked up at him. “What is this?”
“I fixed it.”
I stared at him. “All of it?”
He nodded. “But it took me a while.”
That was an understatement.
I looked at the final page.
Three names.
The girls.
Everything had been transferred to them—cleanly, with no ties to the past.
I folded the papers slowly, then faced him.
“You don’t get to hand me this and think it makes up for almost two decades.”
“I don’t,” Edwin said.
He didn’t argue. He didn’t defend himself.
And somehow… that made it worse.
I stepped off the porch and walked a few feet away, needing space.
He didn’t follow.
Then I turned back.
“Why didn’t you trust me to stand with you? To help you?”
The question hung between us.