I kicked my daughter out at 2 AM and now I know the truth.

And I had locked her out in the rain. I looked up at Leo. Tears were streaming down his face. “She was trying to tell you, Dad,” Leo sobbed. “She was scared.” I didn’t say a word. I went to my room, packed a single bag, and booked the first flight to Phoenix.

 

I didn’t care about the cost. I didn’t care about my job. I spent the entire 4-hour flight staring out the window, my mind screaming at me. How could I have been so blind? How could my pride have been worth more than my daughter’s life? When the plane landed in the desert heat, I took a taxi straight to the address of the Waffle House listed in the post. It was 3 in the afternoon. The sun was blinding, and the air smelled of hot asphalt and exhaust.

 

My hands were shaking as I pushed open the glass door of the diner. A bell chimed above my head. The diner was mostly empty. A few truck drivers sat at the counter, and the smell of grease and coffee filled the air. And there she was. She was wiping down a booth with a yellow rag. Her movements were slow, exhausted. “Kayla,” I whispered. She stopped. She didn’t turn around immediately. Her shoulders tensed, and she slowly stood up straight. When she finally turned to look at me, her face went completely blank.

 

There was no anger in her eyes. There was only a deep, hollow emptiness. That hurt worse than any scream. I walked toward her, my boots heavy on the linoleum floor. “What are you doing here, David?” she asked. She didn’t call me Dad. “Kayla, please,” I said, my voice breaking. I fell to my knees right there in the middle of the diner. I didn’t care who was watching. “I saw the post,” I sobbed, my tears dropping onto the floor. “I didn’t know. I am so sorry. I am a monster.” She looked down at me. She didn’t reach out to touch me. “You didn’t ask,” she said quietly. “You just locked the door.”  

Part 5 of 5

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