An Elderly Woman Asked Me to Marry Her as Her Final Wish – After She Passed Away, Her Lawyer Handed Me Her Hospital Bag and Said, ‘She Chose You for a Reason’

PART 3

Mr. Charleston’s office was quiet when I unfolded Gloria’s letter again.

This time, Marcus sat across from me with his arms crossed, waiting for a fight. The lawyer had arranged the meeting after I told him I had read Gloria’s words.

I took a breath and began reading aloud.

“My dearest Daniel. When I was seventeen years old, I gave up a baby boy. I spent fifty years writing letters to him that I never had the courage or the chance to send.”

My voice cracked.

But I kept reading.

“I found the records too late. By then, my son had already passed away. But he had left behind a child. A boy raised in foster care, who later became an orderly at a nursing home.”

Marcus shifted in his chair.

The color began to drain from his face.

“I recognized you the moment you walked into my room, Daniel. I had a photograph. But I did not want you to come to me out of duty. I wanted to know you as yourself.”

I stopped reading and looked up.

Mr. Charleston watched me with quiet kindness.

“The marriage,” I whispered. “It was to protect her final wish.”

“Yes,” the lawyer said. “If Gloria had simply named you in her will, Marcus could have challenged your identity in probate for years. He could have claimed the DNA was false, the adoption file was forged, or the records were tampered with. But a legal spouse becomes next of kin the moment the marriage certificate is signed. He could not freeze the estate the same way.”

Then Mr. Charleston slid a thick folder across the desk toward Marcus.

“Inside this folder are the unsealed adoption records, your father’s birth certificate, and a DNA comparison Gloria arranged last spring using her own sample and a coffee cup Daniel left in her room. The result is ninety-nine point nine percent. You are welcome to contest it.”

Marcus stared at the folder.

For once, he had nothing to say.

He stood suddenly, opened his mouth, then closed it again.

Then he walked out without another word.

I reached into the old canvas bag and pulled out the small photograph.

A young Gloria.

A baby in her arms.

My father.

“She was looking for me,” I said softly. “All those years.”

Mr. Charleston nodded.

“She found you. And she made sure you would know.”

One month later, I stood inside the small house Gloria had left me, hanging that photograph above the mantel.

I used part of the money she left behind to start a visitor program at the nursing home.

No resident would have to sit alone again.

Not if I could help it.

Sarah came by that first afternoon to help me organize everything. She watched as the residents smiled at their new visitors, then placed a hand on my shoulder.

“She chose well, Daniel.”

And in that moment, I finally understood.

The family I had spent my whole life believing I never had had been searching for me all along.

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