Father Missed Her Wedding — Then Asked For Money Years Later-heuh

My father missed my wedding and never even bothered to call.

Years later, after my hospitality company reached a valuation of £580 million and my name began appearing in business magazines, he sent me a text as if nothing had ever happened.

Family dinner. 7 p.m. Important discussion.

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That was all.

No congratulations.

No pride.

No “I saw what you built, Hannah.”

Just another order from a man who had always mistaken silence for respect.

I stared at the message in my office while the last of the celebration flowers perfumed the room and the sound of laughter still drifted from the kitchen downstairs.

Someone had left a half-full mug of tea on my desk, gone cold beside a stack of interview requests.

My phone looked ordinary in my hand.

The message did not.

It reached back through the years and found the girl I used to be, the one who stood in doorways hoping her father would look up.

My name is Hannah Collins, and for most of my life, I believed my father’s love was something I had failed to earn.

Richard Collins built his life around hotels, numbers, reputation, and control.

He could remember the smallest detail in an old profit report, but he could not remember the evening of my piano recital.

He never seemed to miss Ethan’s football matches.

He missed my awards evenings.

He missed my graduations.

He missed the small, ordinary moments that tell a child whether they matter.

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