When my daughter whispered “I miss you, Dad” into the landline, the world I had carefully rebuilt cracked straight through the center. Her father had been dead for eighteen years. Or at least, that’s what I’d believed.
My husband, Victor, d.i.3.d when our daughter Mara was just two weeks old. A car crash — sudden, violent, senseless. One moment, he kissed my forehead before heading to the store for formula.
Next, a police officer was standing in our doorway, hands clasped, voice gentle and apologetic, while I tried to understand words that felt impossible. I was twenty-three, widowed, and holding a newborn who cried as if she already knew the shape of loss. Victor’s mother, Irene, stepped in immediately.
She worked at the city council offices and was the kind of woman who handled crises like business transactions: efficiently, briskly, and without room for questions. She organized everything — the funeral, the cremation, the legal paperwork. She insisted on a closed casket and a quick cremation, citing “the state of the injuries.”
I didn’t argue.
My grief was a fog thick enough to swallow questions whole. I never saw his body. I told myself it didn’t matter.
Dead was dead, I repeated, until the words numbed into truth. Eighteen years passed like that — slowly, painfully, then all at once. Mara grew into a thoughtful, perceptive girl with the same warm hazel eyes Victor had.
She was gentle in ways that made my heart ache, and curious in the ways of children who sense that their story has missing pages. She’d ask about her father in quiet, careful moments:
“What was he like?”
I’d tell her the bits I still carried — the terrible jokes, the off-key singing, the way he’d squeeze my hand twice when he wanted to say I love you without speaking. For a long time, that was enough.
Until it wasn’t. It was an ordinary Tuesday. I was drying dishes when I heard Mara’s voice from the hallway.
Soft. Tender. “Okay… I miss you too, Dad.”
I dropped the towel.
She turned, startled, and slammed the phone back onto the base as if it burned her. “Who was that?” I whispered. “No one.
Wrong number,” she said quickly, then dashed upstairs. Wrong number. But I knew the sound of affection in her voice.
I knew the quiet trembling of truth hiding behind a lie. That night, after she fell asleep, I checked the landline call log. A number I didn’t recognize appeared multiple times.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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