My Stepdad Raised Me After My Mom Died When I Was Four — But At His Funeral, A Stranger Told Me To Check The Bottom Drawer In His Garage If I Wanted The Truth

My Stepdad Raised Me After My Mom Died When I Was Four — But At His Funeral, A Stranger Told Me To Check The Bottom Drawer In His Garage If I Wanted The Truth

I nodded. I thanked them. I meant it. But nothing really landed.

I stood beside the urn and the framed photo of Michael squinting into sunlight, a streak of grease across his cheek. That picture had lived on his nightstand for years. Now it felt like a placeholder—an inadequate substitute for the man who taught me how to change a tire and sign my name like it mattered.

“You left me here… alone,” I murmured to the photo.

Michael met my mother, Carina, when I was two. They married quietly. I don’t remember life before him. My earliest memory is sitting on his shoulders at the county fair, one hand sticky from cotton candy, the other tangled in his hair.

My mom died when I was four. That sentence has followed me my entire life.

When Michael fell ill last year, I moved back home without thinking twice. I cooked for him, drove him to every appointment, sat beside him when the pain made him fall silent. Not because I felt obligated.

Because he was my dad in every way that counted.

After the funeral, the house filled with polite condolences and the clatter of dishes. Someone laughed too loudly in the kitchen. A fork scraped sharply across porcelain.

I stood in the hallway holding a glass of lemonade I hadn’t tasted. The house still carried his scent—wood polish, aftershave, and faint lavender soap he always insisted wasn’t his.

Aunt Sammie slipped up beside me.

“You don’t have to stay here by yourself,” she said gently. “Come stay with me.”
“This is my home,” I replied.

Her smile stayed fixed. “We’ll talk later.”

Then I heard my name.

“Clover?”

I turned.

An older man stood there—late sixties maybe. Clean-shaven, deeply lined face. His tie sat too tight around his neck, as if someone else had tied it. He held his cup in both hands like it might fall.

“I’m sorry,” I said cautiously. “Did you know my dad from work?”

He nodded once. “I’ve known him a long time. Frank.”

I studied him. No recognition.

“I don’t think we’ve met.”

“You weren’t meant to,” he said quietly.

That stopped me.

“What does that mean?”

He stepped closer. I caught the scent of engine oil and peppermint. His eyes scanned the room before he leaned in.

“If you ever want to know what truly happened to your mother,” he murmured, “look in the bottom drawer of your stepfather’s garage.”

My breath caught. “What?”

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