The Attic Letter That Made Her Stop Calling Her Stepmother Mom-thuyhien

My stepmother raised me as her own daughter after my dad died when I was six, and for fourteen years I believed that was the cleanest version of love I had left.

I called her Mom because she earned it in the ordinary ways nobody applauds.

She packed lunches in the half-dark.

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She sat in plastic chairs at school concerts.

She signed forms, waited in urgent care rooms, checked homework at the kitchen table, and learned exactly how I liked my grilled cheese cut when I was too sad to eat anything else.

That is why the letter hurt before I even understood it.

It came from the attic, from a cardboard box tied with twine and marked JULIAN in black marker.

My father’s name.

The attic smelled like dust, warm wood, and old cardboard, the kind of smell that makes a house feel bigger than it is because every box seems to be holding a year nobody talks about anymore.

At 12:18 a.m., I was kneeling under the rafters with my phone flashlight shaking in my hand.

Downstairs, the shower had just shut off.

Veronica was about to find me.

I had already found the first picture of my mother.

Her name was Mariana.

For twenty years she had been more story than person to me, because the only thing anyone ever told me was that she died giving birth to me.

No framed photo.

No grave visit.

No birthday story.

Just my dad’s sentence, repeated until it became family law.

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

When I was little, that sounded beautiful.

When I got older, it sounded incomplete.

Still, I trusted it because I trusted the people who said it.

My father, Julian Morales, had loved me with a focus that made the rest of the world feel quiet.

He was an accountant with thin-framed glasses, ironed shirts, and coffee so strong it could have kept the whole block awake.

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