I met Laura when we were nineteen, and from the very beginning, she was impossible not to love. She had this light about her that made every bad day feel smaller. We became best friends almost instantly, though deep down, I always wanted something more.
I never told her how I felt. By the time I realized I should have, life had already moved on. She had a son named Jimmy and a future that didn’t include me the way I once imagined. Still, I stayed close to both of them.
I was there for every important moment in Jimmy’s life. Birthdays, school plays, late-night fevers — I helped however I could. Laura used to joke that I was already family, and honestly, that was enough for me.
Then one night, everything changed. I got a phone call just after midnight telling me Laura had been in an accident. By the time I reached the hospital, she was gone. Jimmy was only four years old and suddenly alone in the world.
There was no father around and no relatives willing to take him in. Without thinking twice, I signed the papers and brought him home. Over the years, I raised him like my own son, and somewhere along the way, he truly became one.
On Jimmy’s 18th birthday, I walked into the kitchen and found him holding an old envelope with my name written on it. His hands were shaking as he gave it to me. “I’m sorry I’m telling you this so late,” he whispered. “I had no other choice.”
Inside was a letter from Laura — a letter that changed everything. Jimmy wasn’t just her son. He was mine too. She had hidden the truth for years, afraid it would ruin my future. As tears filled my eyes, Jimmy looked terrified that things between us would change. But I hugged him tightly and said the only thing that mattered: “You were always my son. Now I finally know why.”