A 1 A.M. Call From His Granddaughter Exposed a Family Secret-kimochi

The phone rang at 12:47 a.m., and I remember that because the numbers on the clock looked too bright for that hour.

They sat there beside my bed in cold blue light while the house stayed black and silent around me.

At first I thought it was some mistake.

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Nobody calls an old man just before one in the morning unless somebody is dead, dying, stranded, or too scared to call anyone else.

Then I saw Lydia’s name on the screen.

My six-year-old granddaughter had learned to call me from Cassidy’s phone months earlier because she liked sending me pictures of her cereal bowls and crooked drawings of horses.

She did not call at night.

She did not call crying.

When I answered, all I heard was a broken little gasp.

“Papa,” she sobbed. “Mommy says the baby’s coming. Please hurry.”

The room smelled faintly of old coffee from the mug I had left on the dresser and the dry winter dust the heater always pushed through the vents.

My bare feet hit the floor before I even understood what I was doing.

“Lydia, sweetheart, where’s your dad?”

There was a pause that lasted only a second, but it felt wide enough for my whole life to fall through.

“He hurt Mommy’s tummy,” she whispered. “Then he left.”

That is the kind of sentence a child should not know how to say.

That is the kind of sentence that makes a grandfather feel every year in his bones and still move like a young man.

Cassidy was six weeks from her due date.

I had circled it on the kitchen calendar myself, pressing the marker so hard it bled through the paper because I was excited and scared and too stubborn to admit either one.

Six weeks early was not a normal worry.

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