He Waited Ten Years After His Wife Died. Then His Daughter Found the List-mdue - Chainityai

He Waited Ten Years After His Wife Died. Then His Daughter Found the List-mdue

Brooke found me on a gray spring morning, sitting near the steps of my new apartment building with rain still clinging to the railing.

She was not supposed to know that place existed.

For one year, nobody in my family had known where I lived.

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For ten years before that, they had known exactly where I lived and had still managed not to come.

I was walking back from the lake trail with mud on my shoes and a bakery bag under my arm when I saw her standing by the leasing office door.

The little American flag beside the glass entrance kept snapping in the wind.

Her eyes were red.

Her phone was clenched in her hand so hard her knuckles had gone pale.

“Dad,” she said.

It came out like she was testing whether the word still belonged to her.

I stopped a few feet away from her.

“Brooke,” I said.

That was all I trusted myself to say.

She looked older than I expected, though she was only thirty-eight.

There were little lines near her mouth now, the kind Jennifer used to say came from worrying more than laughing.

Around her neck hung the small gold necklace her mother had given her at graduation.

The charm was crooked.

For one stupid second, I wanted to reach out and fix it.

I kept my hand at my side.

“We didn’t know where you were,” Brooke said.

“I know.”

She stared at me as if my calmness was worse than anger.

“How could you do this?” she asked.

The question should have hurt.

Instead, it felt familiar.

My family had always been good at noticing pain once it inconvenienced them.

“Do you have any idea what we’ve been through?” she asked.

I looked past her at the wet pavement, the leasing office window, the flag pulling hard in the wind.

The air smelled like rain, lake mud, and the cinnamon roll cooling in the bag under my arm.

“I have some idea,” I said.

A year earlier, I had sold the house quietly.

The house had white trim, a maple tree in front, and a six-chair dining table Jennifer bought from a thrift store when Brooke was still in high school.

Jennifer had sanded that table in the garage with a radio playing and dust in her hair.

She said a family table did not have to be expensive.

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