Uncle Opened A Rusted Warehouse And Exposed Fourteen Years Of Lies-Teptep

“I’m Saying I’m Your Father” — The Night My Uncle Opened a Rusted Warehouse and Exposed the Lie That Stole Fourteen Years of Our Lives

The night Silas Mercer told me to get my coat, rain was ticking against the kitchen window and the kettle had clicked off without anyone pouring a cup.

My mum sat at the table with bills spread around her like evidence.

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There was a rent letter by her elbow, loose pound coins in a saucer, and a receipt she kept smoothing flat even though it had already gone soft from being folded too many times.

My father, Warren Hale, was in the next room with whisky in his glass and the television murmuring to itself.

He had become very good at not hearing things.

Not hearing my mum cry.

Not hearing the debt collectors knock.

Not hearing my uncle’s boots on the back step.

Silas stood in the doorway, rain on his shoulders, looking older than any man in our family had the right to look.

“It’s time,” he said.

That was all.

Two words, said quietly, and my mum looked as if the floor had dropped beneath her chair.

“No,” she whispered.

Silas looked at the table, at the coins, at the envelopes, at her hands pressed flat among all that paper.

“Yes,” he said. “They’ve taken everything else.”

My father came in then, glass dangling from his fingers, mouth curling before he had even spoken.

“What are you planning now?” he said. “Going back to stealing?”

Silas did not answer him.

That was one of the first things I noticed after he came out of prison.

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