Fear burned through my veins the day he reappeared. Fifteen years after calling us “not his problem,” the man I once married walked into the business I built from scraps and sleepless nights, asking for a job… and maybe forgiveness. My daughters, my home, my life
I didn’t recognize him at first. Time had taken his swagger and left him small, shoulders sunken, eyes dim. He stood in the doorway of the office I’d scraped together from rusted trailers and missed meals, staring at the photos on my walls like they were some kind of accusation. In a way, they were. Every frame held the life I’d built without him: my girls growing taller, my staff growing braver, joy layered over old scars.
His voice cracked when he asked for a chance, but I remembered the echo of his words: “Not my problem.” I thought of the nights I rocked two babies alone, the years I swallowed fear and turned it into fuel. So I met his desperation with calm. I chose my daughters, my peace, my hard-won self. He walked out into the same world he’d left me in. Only this time, I wasn’t the one starting from nothing.