She Told CPS I’d Agreed To Take Her Kids — Until The Screenshots Reached Their Fathers-eirian

I left my phone faceup on the desk and watched the caseworker’s number sit in my call log like a lit fuse. The office had gone hollow around me. The copier had stopped. Somebody down the hall laughed once, then a door shut and the sound disappeared. The coffee beside my keyboard had a burnt smell now, bitter and cold. Outside the window, the April sky over Columbus had gone the color of wet cement. My fingers were still stiff from gripping the phone when it rang again.

This time it was not my friend.

It was a man with a tired voice and road noise behind him.

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“My name is Ryan,” he said. “I’m Ellie’s father. The caseworker gave me your number.”

I sat up so fast my chair wheels bumped the file cabinet.

He sounded like he was calling from inside a moving truck cab. Turn signal ticking. Wind pushing against the speaker. Somewhere in the background, I heard a gas station receipt crinkle.

“I’m on I-70,” he said. “They told me she left both girls at school?”

“Yes.”

A long silence followed. Not disbelief. Not confusion. The kind of silence that lands when the worst thing you feared finally decides to become real.

Then he asked, very carefully, “Did she tell them you agreed to take them?”

I looked at the screenshots still open on my monitor.

“She tried.”

He exhaled through his teeth. “Send everything to me. Every text. Every time stamp.”

I forwarded the thread while the blue light from my screen washed over my hands. The message bubbles looked small and stupid laid out like that. Leave work now. Just buy what they need. You said yes. A whole night of child abandonment compressed into little gray and green rectangles.

Before that day, I would have told anybody that my friend and I had the kind of history that makes you excuse too much.

We met when we were nineteen at a diner off Morse Road where the coffee tasted metallic and the booths had cracks in the red vinyl. She was funny in a way that made a whole table lean in. Quick, reckless, magnetic. The kind of woman who could cry in a parking lot at midnight, laugh five minutes later, and make you feel mean for remembering the first part.

When Ava was born, I brought over a secondhand swing and three freezer meals because she was broke and too proud to ask for help. When Ellie was diagnosed, I sat cross-legged on her living room rug with insurance papers spread between us while the TV flashed cartoons and a humidifier hissed by the couch. I had watched her forget bills, lose jobs, date men with truck payments higher than their credit scores, and vanish for days emotionally even when she was physically sitting right there. But I had also watched her kiss the top of Ava’s head absentmindedly while making boxed mac and cheese. I had seen her rub Ellie’s back through a meltdown in a grocery store parking lot until the screaming eased into hiccups.

That was what made people stay longer than they should. There was always just enough softness left to argue with the obvious.

Ava loved my house because it felt calm to her. She liked that the dishwasher hummed at the same time every night and that I bought the same orange popsicles every weekend. She would curl up in the corner of my couch with that ridiculous fuzzy green blanket and read graphic novels like she was hiding inside them. Ellie was different. Ellie needed preparation. Predictability. A house where adults had already thought three steps ahead. Not a place with open stairs and a glass coffee table and four people who could all leave a charger cord hanging somewhere without noticing.

I had told my friend that more than once.

She always heard it as criticism.

Around 6:20 p.m., another call came. This one was from the older girl’s grandfather, Tom. His voice sounded older than I remembered, grainy and tired, like it had been dragged over gravel.

“I’m almost there,” he said. “Caseworker says you’re the one who kept the messages.”

“Yes.”

“Good.”

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