“You are my daughter,” he said simply and directly. “Nothing will change that. Not time, not what I did, not anything. That is simply the truth.”

He looked at the folder.

“But I am also aware that a truth does not undo 30 years. I am aware that I cannot walk back into your life as if I were simply late for something.”

Rebecca said nothing. She was listening.

“But I would like to try,” he said. “Whatever form that takes, whatever pace you need. I’m not going anywhere.”

He paused.

“I have been going somewhere my whole life. Always the next project, the next goal, the next thing to build. I think perhaps I was always moving so I would not have to stop and look at what I had left behind.”

He placed his hand on the folder.

“I do not want you to work as a maid in my house,” he said. “I want to say that clearly, not because there is anything wrong with the work—there isn’t—but because you are my daughter, and I will not sit at a table and be served by my own daughter while I still have breath in my body.”

He slid the folder across the table toward her.