My appendix ruptured at 2 a.m., and I called my parents seventeen times before the world began to blur. My mother finally texted back: “Your sister’s baby shower is tomorrow. We can’t leave now.”

Richard sighed. “Your mother has been… unwell.”

“Careful,” I said.

He looked at me.

“Do not make her cruelty sound like illness.”

He lowered his eyes.

“You’re right.”

We sat in silence again.

Then he opened the folder.

“I also owe you something else.”

Inside were financial documents.

Bank statements.

Copies of transfers.

A college fund account.

My college fund.

I recognized the name because my grandmother—my mother’s mother—had once mentioned it when I was twelve. Later, my mother told me I had misunderstood.

Richard handed me a page.

“Your maternal grandmother left money for both you and Claire. Separate accounts. Yours was emptied when you were eighteen.”

My hands went cold.

“By who?”

His face twisted with shame.

“Your mother.”

“For what?”

“Claire’s first car. Some home renovations. A vacation. I don’t know all of it.”

I stared at the paper.

It should have shocked me more.

But betrayal has a saturation point.

Eventually, new wounds simply confirm the shape of the old ones.

“Did you know?”

“Not then.”

“Do you expect me to believe that?”

He swallowed.

“No. I expect you to doubt everything I say. I earned that.”

That answer disarmed me.

He continued.

“I’ve spoken to an attorney. I’m replacing the money. With interest. It should have been yours.”

I closed the folder and pushed it back toward him.

“I don’t want money from guilt.”

“It isn’t guilt. It’s restitution.”

“Same neighborhood.”

“Maybe.” His voice trembled. “But take it anyway. Use it for therapy, school, a house, travel. Throw it in the lake if you want. Just don’t let my failure cost you more than it already has.”

I looked at him for a long time.

Then I took the folder.

Not because it fixed anything.

Because he was right.

I had paid enough.

Richard wiped his eyes.

“I loved you badly,” he said.

I felt my throat tighten.

“Yes.”

“I don’t know if that counts as love.”

“I don’t either.”

He nodded.

“I’d like to know you now, if you ever want that. Not as your father. I know I don’t have the right to that word anymore. Just as someone who should have done better and wants to spend whatever time he has left doing less harm.”

The old hunger stirred.

A daughter’s hunger.

Dangerous. Hopeful. Bruised.

“I’m not making promises,” I said.

“I’m not asking for any.”

We sat on that bench until the sun shifted and the ducks vanished into reeds.

When I stood to leave, Richard did not hug me.

He asked.

“May I?”

I thought about it.

Then I said, “Not today.”

His face crumpled, but he nodded.

“Okay.”

And because he accepted the boundary, something small inside me unclenched.

Maybe not forgiveness.

But possibility.

By August, I moved into my own apartment.

Ground floor.

Sunlit kitchen.

A balcony just big enough for two chairs and a pot of basil.

Gerald helped me carry boxes, though Ruth scolded both of us and hired movers halfway through the day.

“You two are sentimental idiots,” she declared.