The man turned slowly toward the woman.
“What did you do to her?”
The woman dropped the hose.
“She’s confused,” she said quickly. “You know how dramatic she gets.”The girl shook her head, crying harder.
“No, Daddy. She told me to pretend. She said if I walked, you’d send me back.”
The man’s eyes filled with horror.
For months, the woman had spoken gently in front of him. She said his daughter needed stricter care. She said the wheelchair was necessary. She said the girl was fragile.
But now he saw the fear in his child’s face.
Not weakness.
Fear.
He knelt in the wet driveway.
“Emma,” he whispered, “come here.”
The girl hesitated.
Her knees trembled.
“I’m scared.”
“I know,” he said, tears slipping down his face. “But I’m right here.”
She took one shaky step.
Then another.
The man broke when she collapsed into his arms.
He wrapped his dry suit jacket around her wet shoulders and held her so tightly she could barely sob.
“She said I wasn’t really yours,” Emma cried. “She said adopted girls can be returned.”
His face hardened through the tears.
The woman stepped back. “I was protecting you from attachment. She was manipulating you.”
He looked down at the child clinging to his shirt.
“She is my daughter.”
Emma’s small hands tightened.
“Even if I can walk?”
He kissed her damp hair.
“Especially because you walked through fear to reach me.”
Sirens sounded at the end of the street.
A neighbor had filmed everything.
The woman’s confidence vanished as two officers stepped out of their car.
Emma hid her face against his chest.
“Please don’t let her take me.”
The man lifted her into his arms, wheelchair forgotten behind them in the puddles.
“No one is taking you,” he whispered. “And no one will ever make you prove you deserve to stay.”
As the woman was led away, Emma looked back once at the chair, then at her father.
“Can we go home?”
He held her closer.
“We are home,” he said. “Anywhere I’m holding you.”