My hands were trembling so badly I almost tore the envelope trying to open it.
Inside was a birth certificate.
Not Kevin’s.
A little boy named Noah. Born twenty-three years ago in Tucson, Arizona.
Father listed: Kevin Miller.
I genuinely thought my brain stopped working for a second.
Kevin and I had spent years trying to have children. Years of doctor visits, failed treatments, heartbreak, silence. He cried with me after every disappointment. Or at least I thought he did.
And all this time he already had a son.
Under the certificate was an old photograph of Kevin holding a toddler on his shoulders outside some desert house. He looked younger, happier… familiar and completely foreign at the same time.
Then I noticed something written on the back in faded ink:
“If you ever decide to tell her, do it before he comes looking himself.”
My stomach twisted.
There were more papers underneath — money transfers, hotel receipts in Arizona, handwritten letters from a woman named Elise begging Kevin to be part of the child’s life. Some were opened. Some never were.
That’s when I heard tires crunch outside again.
Not my brother this time.
A dark SUV pulled into the driveway and just sat there idling.
I almost didn’t answer the door.
But when I opened it, a man about twenty-three or twenty-four stood there holding a folded piece of paper in one hand. Same dark eyes as Kevin. Same nervous habit of rubbing the back of his neck.
He looked at me carefully and said,
“Hi… I think my father used to live here.”
Before I could even speak, Kevin’s old pickup suddenly came flying into the driveway behind him.
