Because on the very first line, it read: “Adult Adoption Decree: Petition for the Legal Status of Son and Father.”
I had spent ninety days filing the paperwork, pulling strings through corporate lawyers, and paying off the remaining back-taxes on a small, sunlit property back in Georgia—not far from Savannah, but miles away from the damp, mosquito-ridden riverbanks of our past. I wanted it to be a complete surprise. I wanted to hand him the keys, the deed, and the adoption papers all at once on his upcoming sixty-fifth birthday.
But life, as it always did with Mr. Raymond, had moved faster than my grand plans. His illness couldn’t wait for a birthday.
Through the tinted glass of my steering wheel, I watched the shoulders of the man who had built my entire universe rise and fall with heavy, ragged sobs. He was sitting on the cracked concrete steps of St. Jude’s Chapel, his worn-out baseball cap clutched so tightly in his hands that his knuckles turned white.
My heart felt like it was being crushed by a hydraulic press. Why did I say it like that? I asked myself, the guilt washing over me in suffocating waves. Why did I have to play that cruel, arrogant game?
I had wanted to shock him. I had wanted to deny him a “loan” because a father doesn’t borrow from his son. I had planned to say, “I’m not giving you a single cent… because I am paying for the whole thing, and you are moving into your new home.” But the words had caught in my throat when I saw how frail he looked sitting on my expensive Italian leather sofa. In a split second of emotional paralysis, my voice had failed me, delivering only the devastating first half of the script. And pride—or perhaps sheer cowardice—had kept me from calling him back before he walked out the door.
I gripped the envelope, stepped out of my car, and walked toward the chapel steps. The afternoon heat of the city felt oppressive, but Mr. Raymond looked frozen.