I FOUND A POSITIVE PREGNANCY TEST AND A NOTE IN A PACKAGE FOR MY DAD, SO I SPIED ON HIS DATE.
I was excited to visit my dad in the city. He was there for work, and I hadn’t seen him in weeks. At twenty-two, I lived on my own, but my parents had always been my anchor.
I was sitting in his hotel room, scrolling through my phone, when a courier knocked on the door.
“Can you grab that for me?” Dad called from the bathroom.
I took the package and read the label.
“You want me to open it?” I asked.
“Sure, it’s probably just something from work.”
I ripped the tape off and found a positive pregnancy test and a printed note: “My congratulations, darling! Meet me at Café * at 7 p.m.”
I felt sick. My father—my devoted father, married for twenty years—had a pregnant mistress?
I didn’t confront him. I figured my mom should be the one to have that conversation. So I put everything back in the box, sealed it, and told him I hadn’t opened it.
But I wasn’t just going to let it go. Later that evening, I went to the café. I found a quiet corner, sat down, and waited.
At exactly 7 p.m., my father arrived. He was carrying a bouquet of roses. My heart pounded as I clenched my fists, waiting for her—his pregnant mistress. The door opened, and a woman stepped inside. My breath caught. I knew her. She was the last person I expected to see
…She was my older sister, Melanie.
She looked radiant, almost glowing, and when she saw Dad, she smiled in that soft, teary way people do when they’re overwhelmed. I hadn’t seen her in almost a year. She’d gone quiet after a rough breakup, and no one really knew where she’d been living.
She walked up to Dad, hugged him tightly, and said, “I told him. He’s out of the picture. You were right.”
Dad hugged her back, held her at arm’s length, and said, “I’m proud of you. You’re going to be a great mom.”
I sat there frozen. The bouquet. The note. The test. It wasn’t for him—it was for her. And he wasn’t cheating. He was supporting his daughter, my sister, through an unplanned pregnancy.
My stomach turned with shame for what I’d assumed. All the worst-case scenarios I’d conjured, the hurt I’d projected—it had all been wrong.
I waited until they were seated and ordered before quietly slipping out the door.
That night, I texted Melanie for the first time in months:
“I saw you today. I’m so happy you’re okay. I’m here if you ever want to talk.”
A few minutes later, she replied:
“I was hoping you’d come. I miss you. Can we talk soon?”
And just like that, what began as a night full of suspicion turned into the beginning of healing—between a father and his daughters, and between two sisters finally finding their way back to each other.