Don’t make this more emotional than it needs to be.
My fourteen-year-old daughter had woken up in her own house to a notice telling her to vacate her own bedroom, to compress herself and her life and her safety because my parents had decided her cousin’s temporary inconvenience outranked her right to feel secure in the place where she lived.
And they had done it while I was in Seattle for work, three time zones away, counting on distance to buy them obedience.
By the time I heard the key in the basement door and the familiar shuffle of my father’s shoes on the stairs, I had already laid the paperwork across the kitchen island in a neat stack. The note sat on top of it, smoothed flat beneath my palm like an exhibit in a courtroom.
My father came up first.
He stopped when he saw me.
For a brief, almost insulting second, his face showed surprise before it showed anything else. Surprise, not relief. Not guilt. Not even the quick defensive irritation I had expected. Just surprise, as if the possibility that I might return immediately to protect my daughter had genuinely not entered his calculations.
“Nora,” he said. “You’re home early.”
“Yes,” I said. “I am.”