As evening settled, a knock landed on the door—exactly when Lily had said it would, the moment our “game” turned into something starkly real. When I opened it, the look on the visitor’s face revealed everything. Shock. Guilt. The silent understanding that two sets of plans had collided.
The discussion that followed wasn’t loud or explosive. No yelling, no accusations flying across the room. Instead, it was a slow unspooling—half-truths corrected, explanations dragged out, past choices finally exposed. There’s a unique kind of weight that comes with learning something you never wanted to know but can never forget. That was the air we breathed that night.
But the most meaningful part wasn’t the conversation between adults. It was everything that unfolded afterward.
In the days that followed, my attention stayed fixed on Lily—on her safety, her sense of calm, her understanding of what love is. She didn’t need the tangled, grown-up explanation of events; kids shouldn’t have to carry the weight of adult choices.
