He Heard His Daughter Scream On Easter. Then The Door Opened-Ginny

It was supposed to be the kind of Easter that let an old man forget how quiet his house had become.

The kitchen smelled like roasted ham, black coffee, and the first warm air of spring pushing through the screen window.

My old pickup sat in the driveway under the little porch flag, its hood dusted with yellow pollen.

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Dogwood petals kept drifting down into the yard like the world had decided to be gentle for once.

I had set one extra plate on the table without thinking, the way I still did sometimes when the holiday landed too close to old memories.

Callie’s mother had been gone for years by then, but grief has habits.

It reaches for a second coffee mug.

It listens for footsteps that are not coming.

It saves the good napkins for people who will never sit down again.

That morning, I told myself I was fine.

I told myself retirement was supposed to be quiet.

Then my phone rang at 1:04 PM.

Callie.

I smiled when I saw my daughter’s name on the screen.

She still called me on holidays, even after marrying Simon Thorne and moving behind a gate so polished it looked less like security and more like a warning.

The Thornes were not just wealthy.

They were practiced at being wealthy.

Meredith Thorne could make a person feel underdressed with one glance.

Simon could say the word “practical” in a way that made it sound like he meant poor.

They treated my little house, my old truck, and my work-worn hands like a phase Callie should have grown out of.

But Callie still called.

That mattered to me more than I ever said out loud.

I answered with the voice I had used when she was five years old and afraid of thunder.

“Happy Easter, sweetheart.”

She did not say it back.

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