I Raised My Brother’s 3 Orphaned Daughters for 15 Years – Last Week, He Gave Me a Sealed Envelope I Wasn’t Supposed to Open in Front of Them

“This is everything your father rebuilt. Every debt and account. It’s all cleared.”

Lyra picked up a page and scanned it.

“Is this… real?”

“Yes.”

“And it’s all in our names?”

I nodded.

Dora finally spoke.

“So he just left… fixed everything… and came back with paperwork?”

I sighed.

Jenny pushed her chair back slightly.

“I don’t care about the money,” she said. “Why didn’t he come back sooner?”

That was the question. The one I’d asked myself a hundred ways in the past hour.

I shook my head.

“I don’t have a better answer than what’s in the letter.”

She exhaled and looked down.

Lyra placed the papers neatly back on the table.

“We should talk to him.”

Dora looked up. “Right now?!”

“Yeah,” Lyra said. “We’ve waited long enough, haven’t we?”

I nodded.

“Okay. His number’s at the bottom of the letter.”

Lyra grabbed it and called, her hands shaking slightly. “Dad, can you come over?” Then she nodded. “Okay. Goodbye.”

“He’s at a nearby store. He’ll be here in about fifteen minutes,” she said.

While we waited, no one spoke.

Before the fifteen minutes were even up, there was a knock.

I looked at my girls in the living room one more time before opening the door.

Their father stood there.

When he stepped inside, no one spoke at first.

Then Lyra broke the silence.

“You really stayed away this whole time?”

Edwin looked down, ashamed.

Dora stepped forward.

“Did you think we wouldn’t notice? That it wouldn’t matter?”

His expression shifted slightly.

“I thought… you’d be better off. And I didn’t want to tarnish your mother’s memory.”

“You don’t get to decide that,” she said.