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I wrap my arms around myself and cry.

I cry for my mother.

I cry for my father, wherever he is.

I cry for the dream I thought was finally within reach—the cobblestone streets and fresh starts, the cafés and borrowed time.

It’s unraveling. All of it.

When I finally pull myself together, I reach for my phone.

I don’t hesitate.

I scroll to Spencer’s number, double-check every digit, and type:

I need to talk. Could you call me at this number? It’s important.

I hit send.

No reply.

Not right away. Not in five minutes. Not by the time I change into sweats and make tea. And not as I sit on the couch staring at the wall for an hour straight.

But maybe I’ve got the number wrong. Maybe it’s never even reached him.

I open my laptop and go straight to the Paper & Pixel Foundation website. There has to be some contact info. Email? LinkedIn?Something.

But when the site loads, there he is.

Spencer Devereaux.

In a navy polo and khakis, standing on a grassy lawn with his arm around a stunning woman.

She’s tucking her hair behind her ear and smiling down at a boy—maybe four years old—who’s holding a caterpillar in his outstretched palm.

The caption reads:

Founder Spencer Devereaux enjoys time with family at the annual appreciation picnic.

Family.

He has a family.

A wife.

A child.

Of course he does.

I don’t need to keep searching. I don’t need his email. I have all the information I need.

I close the laptop and sit in the silence.

I won’t be the other woman.

I won’t interrupt an unknowing family with the news of some secret lover’s child.

That’s what my dad did to us.