His Daughter Sent One Text Before Her Recital. Then He Saw Why-mdue - Chainityai

His Daughter Sent One Text Before Her Recital. Then He Saw Why-mdue

The message came in at 6:17 p.m.

I was standing in our bedroom mirror, trying to button the cuffs of a shirt I only wore for weddings, funerals, and school events where parents pretended not to compete.

Emily’s spring recital started at seven.

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She was eight years old, and she had spent three weeks practicing the same piano piece until I knew every wrong note by heart.

Normally, when she texted me from upstairs, it was something like, Dad bring juice, or Can I wear sparkle shoes, or one long row of hearts that made my phone buzz until I laughed.

This message had no hearts.

No misspelled words.

No little face with tears or sparkles.

It said, “Dad, come up to my room. Just you. Close the door and don’t tell Mom.”

I read it twice.

Then I read it a third time, because my mind kept trying to make it smaller than it was.

From downstairs, Sarah called my name.

“Michael, are you two ready? Your dad will be here in ten minutes.”

Her voice sounded normal.

That almost made it worse.

I called back, “Almost.”

The house smelled like hairspray, roasted chicken, and the lavender detergent Sarah used on Emily’s dresses.

The kind of smells that make a home feel safe when nobody has given you a reason to doubt it.

In the hallway, the framed school pictures were lined up in order from kindergarten to second grade.

Emily with missing teeth.

Emily holding a paper sunflower.

Emily in her red sweater, looking serious because she said smiling too big made her cheeks tired.

I passed all of those pictures on the way to her room.

At the end of the hall, her door was almost closed.

I knocked softly.

“It’s me.”

“Come in,” she whispered.

Her pale blue recital dress was hanging over the back of her desk chair.

Her sparkly flats sat under the bed, still stuffed with tissue paper from the store.

Outside the window, the last yellow school bus rolled past the corner, brakes squeaking in that tired way they do at the end of the day.

Across the street, a small American flag on the neighbors’ porch snapped in the wind.

Emily stood by the window with her phone in both hands.

Her shoulders were stiff.

Her face was pale.

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