At 15, I Was Kicked Out in a Storm Because of a Lie – She Had No Idea That ‘Get Out’ Would Turn Into a…

Can you imagine these words? Those were the last words my father said to me before he shoved me into an October storm and locked the door behind me.
“Get out of my house. I don’t need a sick daughter.”
I was 15 years old. I had no coat, no phone, no money, just a school backpack with algebra homework inside and rain already soaking through my sneakers.
Three hours later the police called him, and when he heard what they said, his face went white as a ghost. But by then it was way too late.
I’m Sher Walls. I’m 28 now, sitting in my Boston apartment watching rain slide down the window.
There’s a letter on my kitchen table, shaky handwriting on cheap nursing home stationery. After 13 years of silence, my father wants to see me.
He says he’s dying. He says he’s sorry.
Funny thing about rain, it always takes me back to that night, October 14th, 2011. I remember coming home from school like it was any other Tuesday, backpack over one shoulder, headful of the algebra test I’d just aced.
I was thinking about dinner, about homework, about the band poster I wanted to buy with my birthday money. Normal 15-year-old stuff.
I had absolutely no idea that in less than 2 hours I’d be walking alone through a freezing storm, wondering if I was going to survive the night.
The moment I stepped through that front door I knew something was wrong. My father was standing in the living room looking like a volcano about to explode.
His face was the color of raw meat, his hands were shaking, and he was holding a wad of cash in one fist and empty pill bottles in the other.
My sister Karen stood right behind him. She was 19, four years older than me, and she had this expression on her face—concerned, worried, heartbroken.
She was the perfect picture of a devoted older sister who’d just discovered something terrible about her baby sibling. But I saw her eyes.
I caught that little flicker she couldn’t quite hide: satisfaction.
Our stepmother Jolene hovered in the kitchen doorway, arms crossed, lips pressed together, saying absolutely nothing. That was her specialty, saying nothing while bad things happened.
My father didn’t even let me put down my backpack. He started screaming like I’d set the house on fire.
He said I’d been stealing from his wallet for months. He said I’d been buying pills, hiding them in my room.
He said Karen had found the evidence: cash stuffed in my dresser, pill bottles in my closet, text messages proving I was talking to drug dealers.
I tried to explain. I tried to tell him I’d never touched his wallet, never seen those pills, didn’t even know what he was talking about.
But the words died in my throat because I realized something horrible: he wasn’t listening. His mind was already made up.
Karen had spent the whole day preparing him, feeding him lies like poison wrapped in sugar. She stood there looking devastated, telling him she’d tried so hard to help me, tried to get me to stop.
She said she hadn’t wanted to tell him, but she just couldn’t watch her little sister destroy herself anymore. It was a masterpiece performance, Academy Award worthy.
And my father swallowed every single word like it was gospel truth.
He grabbed my arm hard enough to leave bruises and dragged me toward the front door. My backpack was right there where I dropped it.
He picked it up and threw it at my chest so hard I stumbled backward. Then he opened the door.
Rain was already coming down in sheets, thunder rolling somewhere in the distance. The temperature had dropped 15 degrees since that morning.
My father looked me dead in the eyes and said those words again.
“Get out of my house. I don’t need a sick daughter.”
