After a year abroad, I came home craving hugs and Mom’s cooking—but walked into a kitchen disaster instead. Dirty dishes were everywhere, and the sink barely dribbled water. I offered to fix it, but Mom freaked out, practically begging me to leave it alone. Her fear didn’t make sense. Something was off.
A week later, while she was out, I opened the pipes anyway. What I found stopped me cold: thirty thousand dollars in cash and an old flip phone wrapped in plastic. Before I could process it, Mom walked in. She dropped her groceries, went pale, and whispered, “Why did you have to find it?”
That’s when she told me—I had a brother. Gerard. She had him at seventeen and gave him up for adoption. He found her six months ago, said he was in trouble, and left her the money and phone to hide. Then he vanished. She didn’t know who was after him, only that she was terrified.
I called the number on the phone and met Gerard at a diner. To my shock, he was a cop—undercover, working to take down a drug ring. The money was part evidence, part emergency stash. He hadn’t told Mom the truth to protect her.
That night, we all sat down in the kitchen. Gerard explained everything. Mom cried, not just from fear, but relief. The truth had finally come out.
Now, the sink’s fixed, the dishes are done, and Sunday dinners are for three. Turns out, some family secrets aren’t meant to stay buried.