“Wait… you think I’m the affair child?” Daniel asked, his voice cracking. “So, you don’t remember that day?”
I shook my head. “What day? I don’t even know you.”
Daniel leaned forward, his hands trembling slightly. “Billy, you and I… we’re not strangers. We grew up together until we were about six. Then, one night, everything changed. I remember men coming to the house, shouting, Mom crying, Dad yelling. The next morning, you were gone. Vanished. I thought you’d been taken from me forever.”
I stared at him, my mind spinning. “That’s impossible. My parents have never mentioned any of this. I’ve always been an only child.”
Daniel reached into his pocket and pulled out a worn photograph. My hands shook as he slid it across the table. In it, two little boys stood side by side, their faces nearly identical. Behind them, a dog wagged its tail, and a woman’s hand rested gently on Daniel’s shoulder.
“That’s you,” he whispered. “And that’s me. We were brothers then, just like we are now.”
My chest tightened. The boy in the picture was me—I couldn’t deny it. The same crooked smile, the same dimple in my chin. My whole body went cold.
“But… if that’s true,” I stammered, “then why don’t I remember any of it? Why would Dad tell me you’re just an affair child?”
Daniel’s expression darkened. “Because he’s hiding something. Maybe to protect you. Maybe to protect himself. But the truth is, our lives were ripped apart, and you were told a story to cover it up.”
I felt dizzy, gripping the edge of the table. “This doesn’t make sense. Why wouldn’t Mom know?”
“Maybe she does,” Daniel said quietly. “Or maybe she was part of the decision. I don’t know. But I do know one thing—you’re not crazy. And you’re not alone. I’ve been searching for you for years.”
We sat in silence for a long moment, both of us trying to piece together a puzzle that had been hidden from us for nearly our whole lives. My phone buzzed in my pocket—it was Dad calling. I ignored it.
When I finally got home, Dad was waiting in the living room. His face was pale, his eyes bloodshot, like he hadn’t slept. “Where were you?” he demanded.
I swallowed hard. “I met him. I met Daniel.”
Dad’s face collapsed, and for the first time in my life, I saw fear in his eyes. He sank into the chair and buried his face in his hands. “You weren’t supposed to know,” he whispered. “Not like this.”
“Then tell me the truth,” I said, my voice breaking. “Was he right? Did we live together? Was he my brother all along?”
Dad looked up at me, tears forming in his eyes. “Yes,” he said finally. “He’s your brother. You were never meant to forget him. But I thought keeping you here, giving you a fresh start, would protect you. I thought I was saving you.”
My entire world shattered in that moment. The life I thought was perfect, the family I believed was whole—it was all built on secrets.
And now, standing between the only parents I’d ever known and the brother I’d just found, I had to decide which truth I was ready to live with.