“You took our child.”
Evelyn slid between us, smooth and glacial. “He rescued her from hardship,” she said. Catherine’s eyes burned. “You locked me up and called it love,” she shot back.
Frank tried to sound composed. “You were safe,” he told Catherine. “You had everything.” Catherine let out a sharp, broken laugh. “Except my mother,” she said. Then, softer, “Why did you leave me with her?” Frank opened his mouth, then shut it.
Evelyn’s composure fractured. “You said this would stay clean,” she hissed at him. Frank snapped back, “You said no one would find her.” Evelyn lunged for Catherine’s bag, and Catherine stumbled.
I caught Evelyn’s wrist before she could grab the folder. Her nails dug into my skin, her eyes feral. “Let go,” she spat. I leaned closer. “Not this time,” I said.
A security guard appeared, frozen in place. Catherine stood trembling but lifted her chin. “You don’t get to be my dad,” she told Frank, her voice steady. He recoiled as if struck.
The front door opened wider, and the detective stepped inside with another officer. His gaze fixed on Frank. “Sir, according to official records, you are deceased,” he said. Frank’s face drained of color, and Evelyn’s smile finally collapsed.
Catherine’s hand found mine and gripped tightly. She looked up at me, tears spilling. “Can we go?” she whispered. I squeezed back. “Yes,” I said. “Right now.”
After that, everything unfolded in slow, painful increments—charges filed, statements taken, reporters circling for spectacle. Frank’s second life unraveled beneath documents and handcuffs. I stopped reading headlines once I saw Catherine’s name reduced to bait.
At home, Catherine stood in the doorway of her old bedroom, staring at the lavender walls. “You kept it,” she said softly. “I didn’t know how to let it go,” I admitted. She brushed a fingertip over one tiny sneaker. “No one ever kept anything for me,” she whispered.
The first weeks were uneven. She double-checked the locks and slept with a lamp glowing. Sometimes she snapped, “Don’t hover,” and I stepped back, then cried quietly in the laundry room where she couldn’t hear.
We rebuilt through small rituals: tea on the porch, quiet walks, photo albums only when she asked. One evening she studied a picture of herself at three and said, “I don’t remember your voice the way I wanted.” I swallowed hard and said, “Then we’ll make new memories. As many as you want.”
On her next birthday, we bought two cupcakes. She lit two candles and said, “One for who I was, one for who I am.” We sat side by side in the rocking chair, our knees touching, and for the first time, the room felt like a room again.
