It was proof capable of erasing our entire family.
The first sentence was unmistakably my aunt’s sharp handwriting:
My throat tightened so much I could barely speak.
Across the aisle, my father stared at me as if I were holding a weapon. His lips moved, but no sound came out. My stepmother gripped his hand until her knuckles were white.
The lawyer nodded once, silently urging me: Read it.
I scanned the chapel. Everyone expected the usual drama about money, inheritance, and greed. They weren’t prepared for what came next.
I steadied my voice and continued aloud:
“Your father is not who he claims to be. In 1994, he changed his identity after a financial crime investigation and assumed the Sterling name illegally.”
A ripple of shock spread through the crowd—half gasp, half whisper.
My uncle leapt to his feet, chair scraping the floor. “That’s insane!” he shouted.
The letter went on:
My hands trembled. The proof was laid out neatly behind the letter: court filings, name-change records, bank statements, a sworn private investigator’s report—the kind of evidence that doesn’t care about denial.
My father jumped up, shouting, “Stop! This is a lie! She was sick, paranoid—”
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