I Found My Daughter Crying Over Dog Food In Our Kitchen-Teptep

Eat up. That’s all you deserve.

Those were the words I heard the night I came home early and found my six-year-old daughter kneeling on the kitchen floor with a metal dog bowl in front of her.

I had been at a charity gala, wearing a black suit that still smelled faintly of rain and other people’s champagne, pretending to care about speeches while checking my phone every few minutes.

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The evening should have been ordinary.

Polite smiles.

A few handshakes.

A quiet drive home through wet roads.

I was meant to stay until midnight because Seraphina had insisted it would look rude if I left early.

She cared deeply about how things looked.

I know that now.

At the time, I thought she was simply better at public life than I was.

I thought she was graceful, organised, generous and patient.

I thought she loved my daughter.

My name is Ronan Vale, and for three years after my wife Celeste died, I did not believe I could be fooled by anything as simple as charm.

Grief makes you suspicious of happiness.

It teaches you to look behind every good day for the bill.

Celeste was killed in a car accident when our daughter, Elara, was only three.

The house did not feel empty afterwards.

It felt accused.

Her coat still hung by the door for weeks because I could not bring myself to move it.

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