She Fled With One Dollar, Then Found Her Stepfather’s Hidden File-iwachan

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

I remember the time because the microwave clock in the kitchen had been blinking since a power outage, and Harrison had fixed it that morning with the kind of irritation he saved for small household things that made him feel disrespected.

The house smelled like frozen pizza rolls, ranch dressing, and damp hallway carpet.

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I was sixteen, still wearing my backpack, still cold from the walk home, still holding the calculus test I had earned a perfect score on that morning.

The red 100 at the top looked cheerful in a way that made me hate it.

It belonged to some other girl’s life.

Some girl whose mother would have taped it to the fridge.

Some girl whose stepfather might have said, “Good job.”

Some girl whose home did not require good news to be hidden until the right mood appeared.

Harrison stood in front of my bedroom door with his white work shirt wrinkled at the elbows and his tie hanging loose around his neck.

My mother, Stephanie, stood behind him with a dish towel twisted between her hands.

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

Ten minutes before that, they had been loud enough to rattle the framed picture over the stairs.

They wanted pizza rolls, sodas, napkins, and ranch dressing carried to the basement.

Tyler had snapped his fingers at me like I was hired help.

I had looked at the pile of homework in my backpack and said, “I have homework.”

That was all.

Harrison’s face changed before he said a word.

It did not twist.

It did not explode.

It simply went flat.

That was always worse.

“You embarrassed my son,” he said.

I told him I had not embarrassed Tyler.

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