The Filthy Doll My Ex Sent Hid A Prisoner’s Terrifying Warning-heuh

Three years should have been enough time for me to stop flinching whenever Lily asked about her father.

It was not.

Children have a way of keeping ghosts alive without meaning to hurt you.

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A drawing on the fridge with one figure missing.

A school form with a blank space where a second parent should have signed.

A sleepy question from under the duvet, asked in the dark because even at seven years old she knew daylight made certain answers harder.

“Do you think Daddy remembers my birthday?”

I always answered carefully.

I never lied if I could help it, but I had learnt that truth could be shaped gently, the way you fold a sharp note before passing it into someone’s palm.

“I think grown-ups can be very silly and very selfish,” I would say, tucking her blanket under her chin.

She would nod as if that explained everything.

It did not, of course.

Daniel had not simply become silly.

He had vanished.

One month he was arguing over school pick-up times and telling me I was being dramatic about money.

The next he was gone, swept into Vanessa’s bright, expensive world as if our life had been a coat he had left behind on a chair.

I saw the photographs by accident first.

A friend sent them with a message that only said, “I’m so sorry.”

There he was, on a marble staircase, holding the hand of a woman who looked as if she had never had to check the price of anything.

Vanessa had glossy hair, careful diamonds, and the relaxed smile of someone who expected doors to open before she reached them.

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