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I didn’t do any of it out of obligation. I did it because he was my father in every way that mattered.
I did it because he was my father.
I stood near the hallway table, nursing a glass of lemonade I hadn’t touched. The furniture still smelled like him — wood polish, aftershave, and the faint trace of that lavender soap he always claimed wasn’t his.
“You don’t have to stay here alone,” she murmured. “You can come home with me for a while.”
“This is my home.”
She hugged me tight.
My name came from behind me.
I turned.
An older man stood there — maybe late 60s. He was clean-shaven but deeply creased. His tie was too tight, like someone else had knotted it for him. He held his cup in both hands, like it might slip.