I was 26 when my uncle died—the man who raised me after my parents were gone.
At his funeral, I thought I was saying goodbye to the only person who had ever truly been there for me.
Then Mrs. Patel handed me a letter.
My name was written on it in his rough, familiar handwriting.
I opened it with shaking hands.
The first line made my chest tighten.
“Hannah, I’ve been lying to you your whole life.”
I don’t remember the accident.
That’s what I’d always been told—that there was a crash, my parents died, and I survived… but I never walked again.
That was the story. Clean. Simple. Final.
But before that, I had a life.
My mom used to sing too loudly in the kitchen. My dad always smelled like motor oil and peppermint gum. I had light-up shoes and a purple cup I refused to let go of.
Then one night, everything ended.
Or at least, that’s what I believed.
After the accident, the state started talking about “placements.”
Then my uncle Ray showed up.
Big hands. Quiet voice. Always looking like he hadn’t slept enough.
“They’re not taking her,” he told the social worker. “She’s mine.”
He didn’t know what he was doing.
But he learned.
He watched nurses, wrote things down, practiced until he got it right. He woke up every two hours the first night we got home, checking on me like I might disappear if he didn’t.
He built ramps. Fought insurance companies. Burned dinners while arguing on the phone about things we couldn’t afford not to have.
He never said it—but everything he did said it for him:
You’re staying. You’re safe.
He learned how to braid my hair by practicing on a doll.
It was terrible.
I loved it.
When I hit puberty, he handed me a bag of “supplies” and refused to make eye contact.
“You watched YouTube, didn’t you?” I asked.
He grimaced. “Those girls talk too fast.”
We didn’t have much.
But I never felt like a burden.