There are mornings that begin like any other and end by changing the entire direction of your life.
This was one of those mornings.
Emily had turned thirty-two that day. She had decorated her own cake the night before, set out paper plates for her parents’ visit, and covered her face as carefully as she could with makeup before her father arrived. She had been doing that kind of covering up for a long time. Not just with makeup. With excuses, with silence, with the particular skill that develops in people who spend years protecting someone else’s image at the cost of their own dignity.
Her father, Richard, came through the front door carrying a white bakery box with her favorite strawberry shortcake inside. He was smiling when he crossed the threshold.
He stopped smiling the moment he saw her face.
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