“Leave this house. You’re not my child. Don’t ever come back.” Those were the words I hurled at her that night, words born from grief, rage, and a truth I thought I understood. Ten years have passed, yet they still live inside my head, sharp and unforgiving, echoing when the house is quiet and the rain taps against the windows.
She was fourteen—small, soaked through by autumn rain, clutching a worn backpack to her chest—standing on the front steps of our home in Salem, Oregon. The porch light cast a pale glow over her face, and for a moment I thought she might argue or cry out. She didn’t. She simply looked at me, eyes wide with fear and confusion, then turned and walked into the storm. I watched her disappear, telling myself I was doing what was necessary, what was justified. I told myself lies because the truth hurt too much.
My name is Adrian Morales. I was forty-one then, running a regional building-supply business, convinced my life was solid and earned. I had a steady income, a warm home, and a wife I loved deeply. Elena was the center of our world—warm, patient, endlessly kind. When she died in a late-night collision one October evening, the ground beneath me collapsed. Grief cracked me open, hollowed me out, left me grasping for anything that made the pain make sense. I didn’t know how to sit with that loss, so I searched for reasons, for blame, for something to hold onto. What I found destroyed me.
Weeks after her funeral, while sorting through her things, I came across a bundle of old letters hidden in a drawer. They were yellowed with age, tied with a ribbon that had once been blue. They weren’t addressed to me. They were written to a man named Thomas.