My Fiancée Wanted a Break Because of a New Guy, So I Packed Up and Moved Cities…
Seeking Help and Final Closure
They also said that they had no idea what was going on until recently when they found out. They called Sarah and had a lengthy conversation with her.
Her father confessed that the chat was more appropriate for an adolescent than an almost 30-year-old woman. Sarah vowed that she would stay away from me and seek therapy.
I felt relieved, not just for myself, but also for her. Everything that happened between us was not ideal, but I sincerely wish her the best.
I hope she finds happiness. Before we hung up, I thanked her parents and expressed how much I admired and respected them.
I can now state with certainty that this is over. Sarah would never violate her parents’ confidence.
Erased Memories and a Silent House
Now to the next story. Why don’t you just disappear?
My stepdaughter said during a fight. Her mother joined in.
“We’d be better off without you.”
I didn’t say anything. I had just packed my suitcases this morning.
My phone exploded with 13 missed calls. Something seemed strange when I strolled into our living room.
The house was abnormally silent, but that wasn’t all. My gaze swept over the room, attempting to determine what was wrong.
Then it struck me: all of our family photos looked different. I took a step closer to the enormous frame above the fireplace from our trip to Yellowstone last year.
The photo was present, but I wasn’t. Every photo of me had been painstakingly erased, creating embarrassing gaps in family memories spanning the previous three years.
The Drifting of a Stepdaughter
I was standing there, my coffee cup becoming cold, when I heard Stella’s upstairs door softly close. My stepdaughter’s footsteps stopped at the top of the stairs.
She had obviously seen I was awake. After a brief pause, she walked down, phone in hand, purposefully avoiding eye contact as she headed toward the kitchen.
“Morning,”
I said, my tone calm. The hush that followed was thick with intention.
Three years was how long I’d been in Stella’s life. Three years of gradually establishing trust, of movie nights and math homework assistance, of attempting to be present without going too far.
At the age of 16, she began to drift away. I expected ordinary teenage rebellion, but this seemed different.
It began last week when I offered to assist her with her chemistry project. She’d been grappling with the subject and I figured it didn’t matter what I thought.
Her remark was like a slap.
“Stop pretending you care about my grades. You’re not my real dad.”
A House Divided
I’d heard variants of that before, but something about her tone was different—sharp and intentional. My wife Delilah was in the kitchen and must have heard, but she did not say anything.
That quiet felt like taking sides. The tension grew over the week with small things: dishes left in the sink with pointed looks and doors closed a little too harshly.
Conversations halted when I entered the rooms. Delilah also became distant, avoiding my attempts to clarify what was going on.
“She’s just being a teenager, Thomas. Don’t make it about you.”
But everything burst last night. Stella was texting during supper, which goes against our customary norms.
When I gently reminded her, she threw down her phone.
“God, why are you always policing everything I do? Why can’t you just leave me alone?”
“Stella,”
I said.
“I’m just trying to…”
“To what? Play dad? I already have one!”
She stood up, the chair scratching against the floor.
“Why don’t you just disappear? Nobody asked you to try so hard. It’s pathetic.”
The Breaking Point
I looked at Delilah, not sure what I was expecting. Support? Mediation?
Instead, she placed her fork down and calmly murmured,
“Maybe we’d all be better off if you did.”
The words hung in the air like smoke. Three years of memories flew through my mind.
The day Stella first laughed at one of my dad jokes. The night she called me in tears after her first boyfriend broke up with her.
And Delilah’s proud smile when Stella requested me to help her pick out her prom outfit. I stood up slowly, my food half finished.
“Okay,”
I replied simply.
“Okay what?”
Stella demanded, but something flickered in her eyes. Uncertainty, perhaps.
“If that’s how you both feel, okay.”
Walking Away
I strolled upstairs to our bedroom and took out my old duffel bag. I could hear them whispering downstairs, but no one came up.
While I gathered enough clothes for a few days, I saw that my hands were not shaking. I felt strangely relaxed.
Stella had already left, most likely to her room. When I arrived, Delilah stood at the kitchen doorway, arms crossed.
“So you’re just leaving? That’s your solution?”
“You said you’d be better off,”
I responded, looking for my keys and wallet.
“I’m respecting that.”
“That’s not—I didn’t mean—”
She paused. Pride, wrath, or something else kept her from saying what she wanted to say.
I took up my purse.
“I’ll be at Ryan’s. I’ll figure out something more permanent soon.”
I hesitated at the doorway.
“You know, when Stella said those things before, it hurt. But hearing you agree? That broke something, Dell.”
Seeking Refuge at Ryan’s
I drove to Ryan’s apartment in solitude. He looked at me and immediately set up his guest room; that’s the type of friend he is.
I turned off my phone and took a sleeping pill from my emergency travel box. This morning, I awoke to find sunlight flowing through unfamiliar drapes.
When I eventually turned on my phone, it was filled with notifications. Thirteen missed calls: eight from Delilah, three from Stella, and two from Quinn, my sister.
Twenty-seven text messages, four voicemails. I have not listened to them yet.
I’m sitting in Ryan’s guest room, watching the morning traffic below and thinking about the empty places in our family portraits. Maybe they were always there, but I didn’t want to see them.
My phone vibrates again. It’s Stella.
After everything that has transpired, I find myself staring at her name on the screen, wondering what is so necessary right now. But I am not ready, not yet.
Walking away isn’t always the hardest part; it’s deciding whether to walk back.
