The screen showed a message thread.
Avery’s name at the top.
My heart pounded as I scrolled.
It wasn’t drugs.
It wasn’t crime.
It wasn’t lies.
It was a conversation with a woman I didn’t recognize — full of cautious questions, late-night messages, and one sentence that hit me like a punch:
“I think I might be your biological mother.”
I looked up at Marisa.
“You went through her phone?”
“She deserved the truth,” Marisa snapped. “You’re not her real father.”
That’s when Avery appeared in the doorway, pale and shaking.
“I was going to tell you,” she whispered. “I swear. I just… didn’t know how.”
I pulled her into my arms immediately.
The woman had reached out months earlier after seeing Avery in a hospital volunteer photo online. She had been young, scared, and forced into adoption after the accident — something Avery and I were never told.
Avery wasn’t hiding something terrible.
She was scared of losing me.
Marisa scoffed.
“So what, you’re just okay being lied to?”
I looked at Avery.
Then back at Marisa.
“I’m not okay being betrayed,” I said calmly. “Which is why this ends tonight.”
Marisa left without another word.
Avery cried in my arms for an hour.
“I didn’t want you to think I was looking for someone better,” she sobbed.
I kissed her forehead.
“There is no better. There’s just us.”
We’re taking things slowly now. Letters first. Boundaries clear.
And every morning when Avery leaves for school, she hugs me and says the same thing she said in the ER all those years ago:
“You’re the good one.”
And that’s all I’ve ever needed to be.