She Found Her Father’s Attic Letter And Her Childhood Split Open-yumihong

The attic ladder complained before I even put my full weight on it.

It made a long, wooden squeal that seemed too loud for a sleeping house, and I froze halfway up with my phone flashlight pressed tight in my hand.

Below me, the hallway was dark except for the thin line of light under the bathroom door.

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Above me, the attic smelled like dust, warm wood, old cardboard, and years that had been packed away on purpose.

I was twenty years old, but in that moment I felt six again.

Six was the age I was when my father died.

Six was the age when every adult around me began lowering their voices.

Six was the age when I learned that a person could disappear from a house and still be everywhere inside it.

His name was Julian Morales.

He was an accountant, which meant he believed in order, receipts, tidy folders, sharpened pencils, and coffee so strong it could wake up the dead.

When I was little, he wore ironed shirts even on Saturdays.

He had thin-framed glasses, a soft laugh, and absolutely no gift for fixing a little girl’s hair.

I used to sit on the kitchen counter in our small suburban house outside Chicago while he tried to make two even ponytails before kindergarten.

One side always ended up higher than the other.

“Sorry, my love,” he would say, squinting at the hair tie like it was a complicated tax form. “Your dad knows how to handle returns, not braids.”

Then he would kiss my forehead.

“You are my whole world, Valentina.”

When a child is loved that openly, she does not ask for proof.

She just lives inside it.

My biological mother, Mariana, was not a person in our house so much as a sentence.

“Your mother loved you so much she gave you her whole life.”

That was what my father said whenever I asked about her.

There were no pictures of her in the living room.

There were no long stories about what made her laugh or how she wore her hair or whether she sang while she cooked.

There was no annual visit to a grave.

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