When I got home three hours early, my daughter was sitting alone in the basement, wrapped in her late mother’s sweater. She looked up at me and whispered, “I was good today, Dad.” But the notebook hidden deep in her pocket told a completely different story. Part 1: Early Return
I came home three hours early because a merger died in London and took my schedule with it.
Usually I got back after dark, when the house was quiet and Lydia had already set the story for the day. Homework done. Baths finished.
Children “resting.” My late wife’s sister had moved in after Sarah died and made herself indispensable. I let her. That was my failure.
The house in Westchester was too quiet when I walked in. No piano. No cartoons.
No footsteps. Just air-conditioning and the smell of lilies. I called for Maya.
Then Leo. No answer. In the kitchen, I saw mud on the floor leading toward the basement door.
Lydia always kept it locked. She said the stairs were dangerous for the kids. I unlocked it with my spare key and went down.
Maya was behind the boiler, curled into a ball, wrapped in Sarah’s old sweater. Her lip was split. One side of her face was swollen.
She flinched when the light hit her. I reached for her. She covered her head and whispered, “I was good today, Dad.
I promise.”
That sentence hit harder than anything I had heard in years. I knelt down and said her name. She looked at me like she wasn’t sure I was real.
Then she whispered something worse. “Is it time for the Quiet Game again? I won’t breathe loud.”
I pulled her into my arms.
She was shaking. Thin. Cold.
I asked where Leo was. “The attic,” she said. “Aunt Lydia said he was too loud.”
Then a notebook fell from the sweater pocket onto the floor.
I picked it up. Inside were pages in Maya’s handwriting. Dates.
Times. Punishments. Phrases Lydia had forced her to practice.
Don’t tell. Daddy gets mad. I fell.
I make trouble. Tucked into the back was a draft custody petition. Lydia had already filled in most of it.
She was building a case against me while living in my house and hurting my children with my permission. Upstairs, the front door opened. Lydia’s voice floated through the hall.
“Maya? Leo? Time to practice your scared faces.
The social worker will be here soon.”
That was when the panic burned off and something colder took over. Part 2: The Trap
I hid Maya in the pantry and told her not to move. Then I went outside, climbed the trellis to the attic window, and found Leo in a dark room with duct tape over his mouth and a photographer pointing a camera at him.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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