Her Father’s One Call Turned an Easter Assault Into a Reckoning-paupau

Easter was supposed to be quiet in my little house.

Quiet had become a habit after my wife died.

The kind of quiet that settled in after the ham was wrapped in foil, after the church clothes were hung back in the closet, after the sink was rinsed and the coffee pot was left on low because there was no one else there to tell me I had made too much.

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The sweet glaze still hung in the kitchen air.

My coffee warmed my hands.

Sunlight lay across the floorboards in long gold strips, and the wall clock ticked with that steady, ordinary sound a house makes when nothing bad has happened yet.

Then my phone rang at 1:04 p.m.

Callie.

For twenty-seven years, my daughter’s voice had been the one sound that could make an empty house feel lived in.

Even after she married Simon Thorn and moved into that estate behind the iron gates, I still kept her high school graduation picture on my refrigerator.

She was seventeen in that photo, grinning like the whole world had opened up just for her, one hand holding her diploma and the other wrapped around my wife’s waist.

After the funeral, Callie used to come by on Sundays without asking.

She would bring grocery bags she pretended were for herself, then leave half of them in my fridge.

She would fix the crooked frame over the hallway table.

She would steal my coffee and say it tasted like burned dirt.

Then Simon came along.

At first, I tried to be fair.

He was polished, educated, careful with his words, the kind of man who knew which fork to use and which smile to wear in front of older men.

Meredith Thorn, his mother, treated my little house like it was a contagious disease.

She never said that outright.

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