I thought I knew what was happening in my own home. Then I found my pregnant daughter lying on the floor, and everything I believed about my marriage began to fall apart.
My name’s Rufus. I’m 55 years old, born and raised in Indiana, though I’ve spent most of my adult life working across states, managing logistics for a freight company.
On paper, I guess you’d call me a steady guy. I’m routine-driven, financially careful, and not much of a talker unless it’s with someone I care about. But there’s one thing that’ll break through all that stoicism in me — my daughter, Emily.
Emily is 25 now.
She’s smart, kind, and funny in that dry, quick-witted way that sneaks up on you. She’s also fiercely independent. She’s pregnant with her first child, and he’ll be my first grandchild.
I still can’t believe how fast time has gone.
Her mom, my first wife, Sarah, passed away 10 years ago from cancer. It hit us like a freight train out of nowhere. Emily was only 15.
That kind of loss changes a kid. It changes a man, too.
I remember how quiet the house got after the funeral, like even the walls were grieving.
Emily shut down for a long time, and I tried my best to hold us together. I was grieving too, but I couldn’t afford to fall apart. Not when she needed me the most.
A few years later, I met Linda.
She was warm and lively, with a way of filling a room with energy. She had a daughter of her own named Jesse, who was 13 at the time. It felt like a second chance for both of us.
We were two single parents trying to rebuild. For a while, I believed the universe was giving us something good.
We got married and blended our lives, and in the beginning, it seemed to work. Jesse was polite enough.
Linda made an effort. But Emily stayed guarded, and Linda never really opened up to her either. She wasn’t openly cruel, just…
distant. The kind of cold that you don’t always see right away, but you feel in the silences and the little jabs that don’t sound harsh unless you’re the one they’re aimed at.
Over the years, it showed in the small things. Linda would correct Emily’s posture at dinner.
She called her “your daughter” instead of “our daughter.” She made comments about Emily’s tone whenever she said anything direct or honest.
Sometimes I caught Emily’s eyes flicking toward me at the table, like she was checking if I had noticed the slight digs. Jesse picked up on it too, echoing her mother’s behavior with smirks and eye rolls she thought I didn’t notice.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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