Relief crashed through me so hard I sobbed out loud, shaking. My father closed his eyes for one second, like he’d been holding his own breath too.
Six months later, I sat on my father’s porch with warm sun on my face and a baby asleep against my chest. The air smelled like cut grass and earth after watering. Down in the garden, my dad knelt by his roses, looking exactly like what the world thought he was: a quiet old man tending to something fragile.
Dave was gone from my life—taken by the system he thought he could control. Mrs. Higgins, too. They became distant, ugly memories, the kind you refuse to touch unless you have to.
I looked down at my son—tiny fists unclenching in his sleep—and felt something settle in my chest at last: not peace, not yet, but safety. A beginning.
My father came up the steps, pulled off his gloves, and sat beside me. He looked at his grandson with a softness that made his whole face change.
“He’s got your eyes,” he murmured.
“And your strength,” I whispered back.
They had looked at my father’s dirt-stained hands and assumed weakness. They never understood that hands can grow roses… and still know how to protect what matters.
My father watched the baby breathe, slow and steady.
“He’s safe now,” he said.
And for the first time in a long time, I believed it.