The night before the Fourth of July, I stayed late at the office, lost in busywork until a call shattered my world. My foster sister Cynthia had died suddenly, and shockingly, she’d named me in her will. I left the city with a heavy heart, unsure what secrets awaited me beyond the grief.
My boss noticed my distraction and insisted I take the holiday off. Outside, the streets buzzed with celebration, families laughing and lighting fireworks, while I felt the sharp sting of loneliness. Then the attorney called again—Cynthia had left something unexpected, a mystery tied to our past.
At her small, quiet funeral, only a handful attended. Cynthia’s foster mom asked if we’d stayed close—I had to admit we hadn’t. But Cynthia had been searching for the truth about our father, and now I held a DNA test proving we were siblings. Her final letter urged me to find him and promised she would somehow return.
I tracked him down—older, remorseful, but still our father. He confessed his regrets but also his love for us both. That day, through tears and tentative smiles, we began healing the family broken for too long. For the first time in years, I faced the Fifth of July with hope, no longer alone.