What she needed was security—simple, lasting truths she could cling to as everything around her changed. We talked calmly about families and all the different ways they can come into being. I explained that love isn’t determined by genes and that being a parent means being there for her again and again: tying shoelaces, catching tears, carving fruit into funny faces, hiding monsters under the bed, sitting beside her when her dreams become scary.
One evening, during our usual bedtime ritual, she snuggled up to me, her hair still damp from the bath. With her finger, she traced little shapes on my arm. Then she whispered so softly it almost faded into the darkness, “Are you still my daddy?” The question touched me deeply. I held her tight and told her the only truth that mattered—a truth that would never change. “I always have been,” I said. “And I always will be.” She breathed her last, like only a child does when they feel truly safe. At that moment, everything fell back into place—not because everything was resolved, but because our bond had remained strong through all the confusion.
In the weeks that followed, peace returned to the house. There were still difficult conversations—necessary, awkward—but none of it seeped into Lily’s life. I protected her space. She painted suns again with sunglasses, named insects, and sang off-key every morning. I was once again the constant she never had to doubt.
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