It was a normal Tuesday—until my five-year-old daughter, Alice, called me at work.
“Daddy, Mommy left. She said to wait for you.”
My heart stopped. I rushed home to find Alice alone, a note on the counter.
“Kevin, I can’t live like this anymore. You’ll know why in a week.”
For seven agonizing days, I lived in fear and confusion. Alice asked where Mommy was, and I could only promise, “She loves you.” I didn’t believe it myself.
Then, on the seventh night, I turned on the news—and my world shattered.
Laurel, my wife, was arrested for fraud and identity theft, living under a fake name in another city. She hadn’t just abandoned us—she had been living a double life.
Suddenly, every late night, every strange withdrawal, made painful sense.
Laurel had known this was coming. And instead of facing it, she left our daughter to face the wreckage.
Explaining it to Alice was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
“Mommy made mistakes, but I’m here. I’m not going anywhere,” I promised.
Laurel’s trial ended in prison time. She wrote letters, but I left them unopened.
Right now, it’s just Alice and me.
And I’ll stay—for her. Always.