The First Letter In Teresa’s Suitcase Revealed Why The Whitmores Threw Her Out So Fast-thuyhien

The first line of the letter was only six words long.

Teresa, do not trust my wife.

My thumb locked against the paper. The room tilted without moving. The little brass lamp on my childhood dresser buzzed softly, throwing yellow light over the ten red deeds spread across the floor. Outside, a dog barked twice and went quiet. My father stood in the doorway with his cane in one hand, his gray eyebrows pulled together.

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“Teresa,” he whispered again, “who gave you all those houses?”

I could not answer him yet.

The handwriting belonged to Mr. Whitmore.

Not the quick signature he used on delivery slips. Not the sharp initials he scratched on checks. This was his private handwriting, the one I had seen for years on birthday cards to Ethan and quiet notes left near his coffee cup.

I forced my eyes back to the page.

Teresa,

If you are reading this, then Elise has finally done what I feared she would do. She has pushed you out of the house before I could speak to you myself.

My fingers tightened until the envelope bent.

My mother came in behind my father, wiping her hands on her apron. The smell of warm tortillas still followed her. When she saw the papers on the floor, her mouth opened, but no sound came out.

I read faster.

Ten years ago, you arrived with one suitcase and two references. I thought I was hiring a housekeeper. I did not know I was bringing the only steady person my son would have.

I saw the nights you sat beside Ethan’s bed when his fever climbed. I saw you skip meals when he was sick because you would not leave him alone. I saw you send money home and keep nothing for yourself.

The paper shook so badly that my father stepped forward.

“Sit down, mija.”

I did not sit.

The letter continued.

The properties are not charity. They are wages I should have made sure you received years ago. They were purchased legally through a trust created in your name. The deeds are clean. The taxes are paid for the next two years. You owe Elise nothing.

I looked at the deeds again.

Austin. Dallas. Phoenix. Denver. Los Angeles.

Ten addresses.

Ten red folders.

Ten doors I had never walked through, all carrying my name.

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