I leaned back in my chair, the skyline stretching endlessly beyond the glass walls. From here the city looked alive, buzzing with lights and movement, yet all I felt was how still and lonely my office was.
People thought I had it all: the company, the money, the recognition.
They didn’t know I had started with nothing, fought for every dollar, every deal, every sleepless night until this company was mine.
But none of it filled the silence when the doors closed behind me at night. I had everything I had ever dreamed of, everything except the one thing that mattered most – family.
My mother died when I was eight, and Richard, my father, decided I wasn’t worth the effort.
I was a little girl, standing on the porch with a suitcase while he walked away without looking back.
Foster homes followed, one after another, and I kept telling myself if I worked harder, became smarter, proved myself, maybe one day it would mean something. But even now, with everything I’d built, that empty space inside me never went away.
A sharp knock on the door broke through my thoughts. I straightened in my chair, masking the storm of emotions, and called out, “Come in.”
Megan, my assistant, peeked her head inside, looking uneasy. “There’s a man here to see you. He’s… with a little girl.”
I frowned. “What man?”
“He says he’s your father,” Megan whispered.
For a moment I couldn’t move. The air seemed to thicken around me. Richard. I hadn’t seen him in twenty years.
I had promised myself long ago that I would never let him back into my life. My chest burned, and I forced out the only words I could manage.
“Tell him I’m not here.”
Megan hesitated, then nodded and left. But seconds later, a voice thundered from the hallway.
“Emily! I know you’re in there! Let me in, I’m your father!”
His words sent a jolt through me, anger, not longing. I threw open the door, my voice shaking but loud enough to make the whole floor stop and listen.
“You stopped being my father the day you abandoned me! Don’t you dare call yourself that now!”
For a second Richard just stared at me, his lips parting as if he had rehearsed some excuse. I didn’t give him the chance.
I slammed the door so hard the frame shook, twisted the lock, and pressed my palms against the wood, my breath ragged.
That evening, I just wanted to get to my car, drive home, and forget the way my chest had burned all day after Richard’s outburst.
But the moment I stepped outside, I froze. He was there, standing on the sidewalk with the little girl by his side, as if he’d been waiting for me all this time.
I kept my eyes ahead, pretending not to see them, but then his hand closed around my arm.
“Emily, please,” he said.
“I just want to make things right,” Richard said. “I know I hurt you. I know I failed you. But I can’t carry it anymore.”
I laughed bitterly. “It’s too late for that. You think you can just show up after twenty years and erase everything? Why are you really here? For money?”
“No. Not money. I swear, I just want us to have a chance.”
Only then did I let my eyes shift to the girl. She was small, her dark hair falling over her face as she clutched the strap of her backpack. “And who is this?” I asked.
“This is your sister,” Richard said softly.
“Half-sister,” I corrected.
He nodded, swallowing hard. “Her name is Lily. She’s the reason I finally understood what I did to you. I was young, I was scared, and when your mother died I didn’t know what to do. I thought walking away was better.”
“Better for who? Certainly not for me,” I snapped. “So what now, Richard? You show up with this child and what, expect me to thank you for finally remembering I exist?”
He opened his mouth again, but I turned away.
For the next few days, every time I looked out the window of my office, I saw Richard on the sidewalk below.
Morning until night, always in the same spot, sometimes with Lily, sometimes alone. He never shouted again, never demanded. He just waited.
It wore me down in ways I didn’t expect. Against my better judgment, a thought crept in, maybe he really was trying.
On Friday evening, I finally walked out to him. “Come on,” I said. “You and Lily. Dinner. My place.”
Richard’s eyes filled with tears. “Thank you,” he whispered.
The three of us drove in silence to my house. When I punched in the alarm code, Richard chuckled. “What is this, a secret base?”
“It’s called security,” I said.
Over dinner, he told me how Lily’s mother had left, how he had raised her alone.
“At least you managed not to walk away from one of your children,” I said.
“I wish I could go back,” he said. “If I could change it, Emily, I would.”
Lily stayed quiet the whole time, picking at her food. I tried asking her about school, about her favorite books, but she only shrugged.
When it was time to go, I handed Richard my number. “Call me,” I said. “If you want to set something up.”
He thanked me again, his voice shaking. Before leaving, he asked to use the bathroom. I pointed him down the hall, leaving me and Lily alone in the foyer.
She stood by the coat rack, her eyes fixed on one of my handbags. “Do you like it?” I asked.
She nodded timidly.
“Thank you,” she whispered. Then, almost too quiet to hear, she added, “He’s lying to you.”
“What do you mean?” I asked quickly.
But before she could answer, Richard reappeared, smiling faintly. They left together, and I stood frozen in my hallway, her words echoing in my mind.
A few days after the dinner, I decided to leave work early. Something in me wanted to give Richard and Lily another chance, maybe to see if her quiet words had really meant what I thought they did.
I called Richard on the way down to the parking lot, but he didn’t pick up. The call went to voicemail three times. I told myself I would just go home and rest.
When I pulled into my driveway, a chill ran down my spine.
The front door was cracked open, not forced, but unlocked. My hand shook as I reached for the spare key spot under the planter, it was empty.
The alarm hadn’t gone off either. Someone had used my house code.
I stepped inside slowly, the silence broken only by faint rustling upstairs. My heart pounded as I walked toward my office.
When I pushed the door open, the sight hit me like a punch: Richard crouched by my safe, the door bent open, his hands full of cash. Lily sat in the corner, her small shoulders tense, her eyes wide.
“What the hell are you doing?” I shouted.
Richard flinched, then straightened quickly. “Emily, it’s not what it looks like—”
“Oh really?” I snapped. “Because it looks exactly like you’re stealing from me!”
He dropped the bills onto the desk. “You have so much. And I need it. You owe me at least that.”
“I don’t owe you anything, Richard. You left me. You don’t get to break into my house and take what you want because you decided to show up again.”
“I brought you into this world. You wouldn’t have any of this without me.”
“You’re unbelievable. You abandoned me, and now you want to take credit for my life? Everything I have, I built in spite of you, not because of you.”
“I need the money,” he said. “For Lily. She deserves better.”
I looked at her, trembling in the corner. “Then take it from me the right way. Ask. Don’t sneak in like a thief.”
I grabbed a stack of bills from the desk, pressed it into Lily’s hands. “Here. This is for her, not you. Now get out before I call the police.”
He didn’t move. I pulled my phone from my pocket and started dialing. Only then did he lunge forward, grab Lily by the wrist, and bolt down the hall.
The front door slammed, leaving me standing in the wreckage of my office, shaking so hard I could barely breathe.
I sank into the chair by my desk, the broken safe wide open beside me. Tears blurred everything.
I hated myself for believing him, for letting the hope of a father cloud my judgment.
Minutes later, voices outside drew me to the window. I heard shouting, saw neighbors gathered around.
Mrs. Johnson and Mr. Miller were scolding Lily as she stood alone on the sidewalk.
I ran outside. “Leave her alone!” I snapped. “She’s with me.”
They muttered and walked off, leaving us in the middle of the street. I knelt in front of her. “Lily, what happened? Why are you here?”
“He… he took the money you gave me. And then he left me. He said he never wanted me, that he just wanted your money.”
My breath caught, and I pulled her into my arms. “I’m so sorry,” I whispered, holding her tighter. “He’ll never hurt you again. I promise.”
Richard had abandoned me, and now he had abandoned her. But I wouldn’t repeat his mistake.
“You’re staying with me now,” I said firmly. “I’m not letting you go through what I went through. You have a home here, with me.”
Maybe I hadn’t found my father, but I had found something I had been searching for all along. A family.