When my mom passed, I slipped a letter into her casket—filled with regrets, love, and promises I’d never get to keep. I thought it would stay with her forever. But five years later, an envelope arrived in my mailbox with my handwriting inside. The very letter I buried.
The reply seemed like it was from Mom, urging me to reconnect with my estranged father. Then he called, saying he had been dreaming about her and wanted to meet. Against my better judgment, I agreed.
At first, he seemed sincere—apologizing for the past and asking for a second chance. But soon he revealed what he really wanted: money. Over the next months, he kept meeting me, sometimes even acting like a real dad. For a while, I wondered if maybe he had changed.
Then I found the truth. Hidden in his desk was my original letter, stolen from Mom’s casket. He admitted he used it to manipulate me, but claimed he eventually realized he wanted a relationship, not just money.
Now I don’t know what to believe. He betrayed me in the cruelest way, but he also showed moments of genuine care. I still have Mom’s letter, and sometimes I wonder: can forgiveness ever rebuild what was broken, or is walking away the only way forward?