I raised her for sixteen years, but at her nursing graduation she called me by my first name and saved the dad seat for the man who had disappeared.-luna

The first paper I pulled out was the homeowners insurance policy.

My name was at the top.

Not Karen’s.

Image

Not Emily’s.

Mine.

The kitchen clock ticked above the stove, loud in a house that suddenly felt too clean. The lilies sat on the table, still wrapped in plastic, their white petals glowing under the small light over the sink.

I had bought those flowers at a grocery store on the way to the ceremony.

The young cashier smiled when she saw them.

“Graduation?” she asked.

“My daughter,” I said, probably too proudly.

Now I stood in the same shirt Emily had given me years ago, reading policies, titles, account numbers, and beneficiaries with hands that would not stop shaking.

Not from rage.

From clarity.

Rage comes hot.

Clarity comes cold.

Karen and Emily came home close to ten-thirty. I heard Robert’s truck outside first, the engine rumbling at the curb like it wanted witnesses.

Then laughter.

Emily’s laugh.

Karen’s lighter one.

Robert said something I couldn’t make out, and both of them laughed again.

I stood at the kitchen counter with the folder open.

When the front door unlocked, Karen walked in carrying a takeout box from the steakhouse downtown. Emily followed with her graduation cap in one hand and her phone in the other.

They both stopped when they saw me.

Robert did not come inside.

Smart man.

Karen looked at the flowers first. Then the papers.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

I looked at Emily.

She would not meet my eyes.

Her makeup had smudged a little at the corners, probably from happy tears. She still wore the white honor cord I had ordered online when she forgot the deadline.

I remembered paying extra for shipping.

That memory made my chest ache in a way anger never could.

“I’m organizing my paperwork,” I said.

Karen gave a little laugh, the kind people use when they want a room to return to normal.

Read More