“Just getting old.”
He was fifty-three years old.
Mrs. Patel finally cornered Ray in the driveway one afternoon.
“You need to see a doctor immediately,” she demanded.
Ray went reluctantly to his appointment.
He came home carrying medical paperwork and wearing a blank, shocked expression.
“Stage four cancer,” he told Hannah quietly.
“It’s everywhere already. Too far gone.”
Hospice workers moved into the house within days.
Medical machines hummed constantly, and medication charts covered every surface of the refrigerator.
The night before Ray died, he shuffled slowly into Hannah’s room and eased himself carefully into the chair beside her bed.
“You know you’re the best thing that ever happened to me, right?” he said.
Hannah tried to lighten the unbearable moment.
“That’s kind of sad, Uncle Ray.”
“Still absolutely true,” he replied.
“I don’t know what I’m going to do without you,” Hannah whispered, tears streaming down her face.
“You’re going to live,” Ray said firmly.
“You hear me? You’re going to really live your life.”
He paused as if gathering courage for something difficult.
“I’m sorry,” he said quietly.
“For things I should have told you a long time ago.”
Ray kissed Hannah’s forehead tenderly.
He died peacefully the following morning.
At the funeral, people kept saying the same thing.
“He was such a good man,” they repeated, as if that simple phrase captured everything.
Back at the house after the service, Mrs. Patel handed Hannah the sealed envelope.
Hannah’s name was written across the front in Ray’s blunt, recognizable handwriting.
The first line hit her like a physical blow.
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