At my mother’s funeral, the priest pulled me aside and said, “Your real name isn’t Brooks,” then pressed a storage key into my hand and told me not to go home, and by the time my stepfather texted Come home. Now., I was already driving toward a storage unit with my Army dress uniform still on and a name in my head that hadn’t belonged to me in thirty years.

At my mother’s funeral, the priest pulled me aside and said, “Your real name isn’t Brooks,” then pressed a storage key into my hand and told me not to go home, and by the time my stepfather texted Come home. Now., I was already driving toward a storage unit with my Army dress uniform still on and a name in my head that hadn’t belonged to me in thirty years.

At my mom’s funeral, the priest pulled me aside.

“Your real name isn’t Brooks.

Your father was a Marine.”

He handed me an envelope.

“Don’t go home.”

Seconds later, my dad texted:

“Come home. Now.”

I went to the storage unit…

and uncovered a 30-year lie.

I was standing beside my mother’s casket in my Army dress uniform when Father Raymond Hail touched my elbow and said my name like it wasn’t mine.

The church in Savannah was full. People from town, old neighbors, a few of my mom’s friends from the hospital where she used to volunteer.

My stepfather, Thomas Brooks, stood near the front shaking hands like he was running for office. Calm. Composed. Grateful for everyone’s prayers.

He looked exactly how a grieving husband is supposed to look.

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