My dad saw me limping with my baby on my hip. Then he said, “Get in the car. We’re fixing this tonight.” Three weeks later,

The grocery bags cut deep into my palms, leaving angry red lines that would probably bruise by morning. I shifted Eli higher on my hip, feeling the familiar ache spread through my shoulder and down my spine. My twisted ankle sent sharp jolts of pain up my leg with every step, but I kept moving because stopping meant thinking, and thinking meant acknowledging just how wrong everything had become.

My eighteen-month-old son’s fingers tangled in my hair, tugging occasionally, his weight pressing against my ribs until breathing felt like work. The afternoon sun beat down on the cracked Portland sidewalk as I limped past Mrs. Chen’s house with its perfectly manicured roses, past the corner where the stop sign leaned slightly to the left, past all the familiar landmarks of a neighborhood that had stopped feeling like home months ago—maybe even years ago, if I was being honest with myself.

I’d called Adam four times. Four times, watching the phone ring and ring before going to voicemail, listening to his recorded voice tell me to leave a message like I was a stranger trying to sell him something. The stroller wheel had bent three blocks back when it caught in a crack, leaving me no choice but to abandon it in someone’s front yard and carry everything the rest of the way.

Everything. My baby. Two bags of groceries.

And the crushing weight of a life I was too exhausted to examine anymore. As I stepped off the curb at Maple Street, my bad ankle nearly giving out completely, I heard my name called in a voice that made my throat tighten with emotion I’d been holding back for far too long. “Maya.”

I turned to see my father’s familiar pickup truck pulling alongside me, his weathered face filled with concern behind the wheel.

Harold Bennett—retired firefighter, the man who taught me to ride a bike without training wheels and change a tire in the rain, the man I hadn’t seen in two weeks because somehow visits had become complicated, always postponed, never quite the right time. He pulled over immediately, his door opening before the engine even stopped running. I watched him take in the scene: the limp, the bags, the baby, the exhaustion I couldn’t hide anymore.

Those eyes that had assessed burning buildings for thirty years, that could spot structural weakness from across a street, those eyes that had always seen through every lie I’d ever tried to tell—they saw everything I’d been desperately trying to conceal. “Why are you walking?” His voice was gentle but firm, the tone that meant he already knew something was deeply wrong. “Where’s your car, Maya?

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