My father left when I was two. No goodbye. No explanations. Just pain. My mother raised me alone, working two jobs, sacrificing everything to give me a good life. She never badmouthed him — she wanted me to forgive him. I never could. Years later, my heart began failing. I needed a complex surgery, but no doctor would take the risk. Then my mother suggested a specialist in another city — Dr. Smith. I laughed bitterly. That was my father’s name. When I met him, I recognized him instantly. He didn’t, know who I was. But when I told him, the truth hit him like a storm. I refused to let him treat me. “I’d rather die than let you be my doctor,” I said. My condition worsened. No other doctor would help. My boyfriend, Ernie, grew distant and refused to support me. One day, my father showed up at my door. I wanted to slam it shut, but I was too tired. We argued. I collapsed. I woke up in a hospital. My mother told me the surgery had gone well — but it hadn’t been just a surgery. It was a heart transplant. I was stunned. “How did they find a donor so fast?” She broke down and whispered, “Your father gave you his heart.” He had sacrificed his life for mine — the man I hated, the one I thought didn’t care. His final act gave me a second chance. I texted Ernie a single line: We’re done. He hadn’t shown up when it mattered.Later, my mother handed me a letter he left behind. One line will live with me forever:M“I was a bad father all your life, so now I want to finally be a real one and save you. I love you. — Your Dad.”