Your uncle asked me to give you this,” she said. “And to tell you he’s sorry. And that… I am too.”
“Sorry for what?” I asked.
She shook her head. “You read it, beta. Then call me.”
My name was on the envelope in his blunt handwriting.
My hands shook as I opened it.
Several pages slid into my lap.
The first line said: “Hannah, I’ve been lying to you your whole life. I can’t take this with me.”
My chest tightened.
He wrote about the night of the crash. Not the version I knew. He said my parents brought my overnight bag. Told him they were moving, “fresh start,” new city.
“They said they weren’t taking you,” he wrote. “Said you’d be better off with me because they were a mess. I lost it.”
My chest tightened.
He wrote about the night of the crash. Not the version I knew. He said my parents brought my overnight bag. Told him they were moving, “fresh start,” new city.
“They said they weren’t taking you,” he wrote. “Said you’d be better off with me because they were a mess. I lost it.”
He wrote what he’d screamed. That my dad was a coward. That my mom was selfish.
That they were abandoning me.
“I knew your dad had been drinking,” he wrote. “I saw the bottle. I could’ve taken his keys. Called a cab. Told them to sleep it off. I didn’t. I let them drive away angry because I wanted to win.”