Easter Dinner Hid A Broken Daughter And A Father’s Buried Past-thuyhien

Easter Sunday had always been the one day Arthur kept simple.

He did not have a large family anymore, and he did not pretend otherwise.

There were two plates in his kitchen that afternoon, one clean and one still drying beside the sink, because he had cooked too much out of habit and set a place for Lily even though she had said she was going to Richard’s family dinner.

The ham glaze had gone tacky on the counter.

The coffee in Arthur’s mug had turned black and cold.

A bottle of lemon cleaner sat uncapped near the sink, leaving that sharp bright smell in the quiet, the kind of smell that made a house feel orderly even when a man inside it was trying not to think.

Arthur had spent two years trying not to think.

He had seen the change in his daughter in small pieces, never all at once.

Lily stopped dropping by after work.

Then she stopped making jokes about his burnt toast.

Then she started checking her phone before answering ordinary questions, as if every word had to pass through someone else’s permission first.

Richard was always there with an explanation.

Lily was tired.

Lily was anxious.

Lily was adjusting to marriage.

Lily was too sensitive about family traditions.

Arthur hated those explanations, but he hated even more that he had accepted them for as long as he had.

He had told himself his daughter was grown, and grown children needed room to choose their own lives.

He had told himself that if he pushed too hard, Richard would use that pressure against her.

He had told himself a dozen things that sounded reasonable until the phone rang.

When Lily’s name lit his screen, he wiped his hands on a dish towel and answered with the same ordinary voice he used when he did not want her to know he had been waiting.

What came through was not ordinary.

It was breath first, then a small broken sound, then Lily’s voice so low that Arthur had to press the phone against his ear.

“Dad… please come get me,” she whispered.

His hand tightened around the towel.

Before he could ask where she was, she said the words that ended every excuse he had ever made.

“He hit me again.”

There was a sound behind her, a sharp movement across wood, and then Lily’s cry cut off.

The phone hit something hard.

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