Her Father Was Crawling On The Floor. Then The Recording Played-chloe

The front door of my father’s house was unlocked when I came home.

That alone would have been enough to make me stop.

Richard Hale locked doors out of habit, not fear.

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He checked the deadbolt twice before bed, lined up his keys on the entry table, and made sure the porch light worked because he believed a house should look lived in, loved, and awake.

That afternoon, the porch light was off.

The little American flag in the planter beside the glass door was sun-faded and limp in the Texas heat.

Inside, the air smelled like lemon polish, cold tea, and the bitter dust of crushed medication.

Then I heard the sound.

A cup scraping against marble.

A breath held too long.

A man trying not to groan.

I stepped into the foyer with my suitcase still in my hand and saw my father dragging himself across the floor while my stepmother watched.

Richard Hale had once walked job sites before sunrise with a thermos in one hand and blueprints under his arm.

He had built Hale Construction from a two-man crew into a company with payroll, office staff, trucks, permits, and men who called him Mr. Hale even after he told them to use Richard.

Now he was on his side in the foyer, one hand braced against the marble, one leg refusing to follow.

His wrist was bandaged.

His shirt was damp where tea had spilled across his sleeve.

His face was pale in a way that made my own breath catch.

Vivian stood over him in red heels.

“Crawl faster, Richard,” she said, the tip of her shoe close enough to his hand to make him flinch. “Or maybe you don’t need your medicine tonight.”

My stepbrother Marcus leaned against the staircase, smiling like this was an inside joke that had finally gotten funny.

On his wrist was my father’s gold watch.

That watch had been my mother’s twenty-fifth anniversary gift to him, engraved on the back with twenty-five years and still building.

I had been twelve when she gave it to him.

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