Father’s Day arrived like it always did. Pancakes. Terrible handmade cards. Way too much syrup. The perfect morning.
But something felt different.
Hazel and Iris kept exchanging nervous glances. Every time I looked at them, they quickly looked away.
I noticed immediately. After eighteen years, fathers notice everything.
Finally, while we sat around the kitchen table, Hazel reached for my hand. Her fingers trembled.
“Dad?”
“Yeah?”
She looked at Iris. Iris nodded.
Then Hazel swallowed hard.
“Please don’t be mad.”
Instantly my stomach tightened. Mad? About what?
“Dad,” Iris added softly, “we’ve been keeping a secret from you all these years.”
A secret? My mind went somewhere terrible. Had they contacted their mother? Had she come back? Had she been secretly meeting with them after everything we’d been through?
I felt sick.
“What secret?” I asked.
Before either of them could answer—
Ding-dong.
The doorbell rang.
The girls jumped. Then looked at each other.
My heart started pounding. No. No way. It couldn’t be. Could it?
I walked toward the front door with shaking hands. Every step felt heavier than the last.
I grabbed the handle. Opened the door.
And froze.
The Man With the Red Velvet Box
Standing on my porch was an elderly man in a gray suit. His silver hair was neatly combed. His eyes were kind. In his hands was a small red velvet box.
The moment I saw him, my knees nearly gave out.
Because I knew exactly who he was.
“Mr. Whitmore?” I whispered.
He smiled. “Hello, Daniel.”
My throat tightened.
Arthur Whitmore. The billionaire founder of Whitmore Medical Technologies. One of the most respected philanthropists in the country. A man I’d met only once, twelve years earlier, for less than five minutes.
“Oh no,” I whispered, turning toward the girls. “Oh no, girls. Why did you do this to me?”
Both of them were crying now.
The old man stepped forward.
“May I come in?”
I nodded numbly.