Her name is Emily.
My wife passed away when Emily was just ten. Illness took her quickly—three short months—and the woman who had built our little home beside me was gone. From that moment on, it was just the two of us.
I became everything she had left.
By day, I worked in my workshop behind the house. At night, I learned things I never thought I’d need—how to cook proper meals, wash clothes, and braid a young girl’s hair. I remember one braid so crooked that Emily looked in the mirror and laughed.
“Dad… it looks like a broom.”
I laughed too, embarrassed. But the next morning, I tried again. I had to. She only had me.
Emily grew into a kind, thoughtful girl. She never caused trouble, always studied hard, and eventually earned a place at a university in Chicago.
The day her acceptance letter came, she ran into my arms.
“Dad, I did it!”
I felt pride… and fear. Chicago was far from our small town. But I knew holding her back would only dim her future.
“Go,” I told her. “Your dad will be just fine.”
The years passed quickly. After graduating, Emily stayed in Chicago and found a job at a logistics firm. She called often.
“Did you eat, Dad?”
“Are you taking care of your back?”
“Are you resting enough?”
Simple questions—but they filled the quiet spaces in my home.
Two years later, she called again.
“Dad… I’m getting married.”
I paused—not out of sadness, but because I suddenly remembered the little girl who used to fall asleep waiting for me at the dinner table. Now she had her own life.
Her husband, Ryan, was an engineer from Seattle. They married in Chicago. I wore my best suit—the oldest one I owned. As I walked her down the aisle, my hands trembled.
“Dad… don’t cry,” she whispered.
I smiled. But the tears came anyway.
After the wedding, she moved to Seattle. The day I saw her off at the airport, she hugged me tightly.
“Take care of yourself, okay?”
“I will,” I said.
But as I watched her disappear past security, I stood there longer than I should have. For the first time, the house felt too big.
She kept calling. Sometimes weekly, sometimes less. She sent money too, but I rarely touched it. I stored it away, thinking:
“If she ever needs it, I’ll have something to give back.”
My routine didn’t change. Work in the morning, cooking in the afternoon, quiet evenings with the television. The money she sent stayed in a small metal box.
About six months after her wedding, the post office called.