The File In Her Stepfather’s Safe Changed Everything About Her Dad-chloe

The belt came out of Harrison Matthews’s pants at 6:12 on a Tuesday evening.

Emily Wilson remembered the time because the microwave clock was visible over his shoulder from the hallway.

She was sixteen years old, still wearing her backpack, still smelling like cafeteria pizza and dry-erase markers, still holding the calculus test she had been waiting all day to show her mother.

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A red 100 sat at the top of the page.

It should have been the kind of number that made a kitchen brighter.

It should have been taped to the refrigerator or slid across the counter while her mother smiled and said, Your dad would be so proud.

Instead, Emily stood frozen outside her bedroom while Harrison blocked the doorway with his shoulders and pulled leather slowly through metal loops.

Downstairs, Tyler and his baseball friends had finally gone quiet.

Ten minutes earlier, they had been yelling for her like she was staff.

Pizza rolls.

Sodas.

Napkins.

Ranch.

Tyler wanted everything carried to the basement because his friends were over and Harrison liked his son entertained.

Emily had already cleaned the kitchen after school.

She had already folded towels from the laundry room.

She had already packed Tyler’s lunch for the next day because Harrison said her mother was tired and Emily needed to be useful.

So when Tyler yelled again, she looked down at the calculus packet in her hand and said the one sentence Harrison treated like a crime.

“I have homework.”

The basement went quiet.

Then came the scrape of Harrison’s kitchen chair.

Her mother appeared behind him in the hallway with a dish towel twisted tight between both hands.

Stephanie Wilson looked smaller than Emily remembered her being before Harrison.

Before him, Stephanie sang in the car and kept Garrett Wilson’s old flannel shirt on the back of the laundry room door because she said it still smelled like sawdust and mint gum.

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