He Found His Daughter in an Alley, Then Faced the Man Who Sold Her Home-thuyhien

I found my daughter sleeping on the street at 11:47 on a Tuesday night in October.

That is the kind of sentence a father never expects to say.

It does not sound real until you are standing in the rain with your knees on dirty pavement, reaching for the child you once carried to bed.

Image

She was not in a shelter.

She was not on a friend’s couch.

She was not in her car with the heat running, pretending she had everything under control.

Emma was curled in an alley behind a CVS on Morrison Avenue, tucked between flattened cardboard boxes and a green dumpster that smelled like old trash, rainwater, and motor oil.

Her coat was pulled over her head like a little tent.

A sad one.

The rain hit the dumpster lid with a dull metal tapping sound, steady and cold.

Her jeans were soaked to her legs.

The running shoes I had given her the Christmas before were covered in mud, and one dark smear along the side looked like it came from the oily puddle near the curb.

For a second, my brain would not let me believe what my eyes already knew.

Then I saw her hair.

That reddish shade had belonged to Catherine first.

My wife had that color when the sun caught the back of her neck in the kitchen, when she would stand at the sink humming along to old songs and Emma would dance barefoot on the tile behind her.

Catherine had been gone five years.

I still saw her in ordinary things.

In Emma’s hair.

In the porch swing at the old house.

In the way Emma curled up when she was cold.

Knees to chest.

Arms locked tight.

Small, even at twenty-six.

I hit the brakes so hard the seat belt struck my chest.

The car rocked forward.

A horn sounded behind me, but I did not look back.

I parked crooked in a loading zone, left the engine running, and ran through the rain with my dress shoes slipping on the wet pavement.

I did not take my umbrella.

I did not think about tickets.

I did not think about traffic.

I only thought about getting to her before the world got one more chance to hurt her.

“Emma,” I said.

My voice sounded strange.

Thin.

Read More