Since inviting my stepfather, Tito Dan, to live with us, money had been vanishing from the closet. Suspicious, I nearly blamed him—until a hidden camera revealed the truth: it was my son, taking money to buy a birthday gift for a friend.
I felt ashamed for doubting the man who once told my mother, “Lyn is enough. She’s my daughter, even if she doesn’t see it yet.”
That night, I apologized. Papa Dan simply said, “Children don’t know how to ask. You can teach them.”
We did—together.
That evening, I changed his contact from “Tito Dan” to “Papa Dan.”
And as he sang in the kitchen, I realized: family isn’t always blood. Sometimes, it’s love that stays—quietly, faithfully, and forever.