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By the time I was thirty-eight, I was single, solvent, and entirely self-sufficient in a high-rise apartment in downtown Baltimore. I had even stopped speaking to them for two years, not because I wanted to punish them, but because I could no longer breathe in a room with people who treated my future as an optional expense.
The change came with a 2:00 a.m. phone call that shattered the peace I had worked so hard to build. My father had collapsed from a massive stroke, and by the time I reached the hospital in Richmond, Wesley’s luxury SUV was already parked under the streetlights.
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