My phone was on the desk when it started vibrating, and I almost let it go to voicemail.I was deep in the structural schematics for the Morrison Center, a mixed-use development downtown that had been consuming my evenings for three weeks. The load-bearing analysis near the east foyer had an anomaly I had been circling for an hour, pen hovering, and I was close to finding it. Close enough that the interruption registered as a cost before I even looked at the screen.Then I looked at the screen.Isabella Griffin. My daughter. Graduation day.I picked up with a smile already forming, expecting the sound of a seventeen-year-old standing on the edge of her future with all the nervous energy that produces, questions about tassel placement, complaints about the ceremony length, maybe a joke about the academic regalia’s fashion sensibilities. I expected her voice to be full of the particular brightness that comes with a day you have been working toward for years.
What I heard instead made the pen fall from my hand.Sobbing. Not the frustration of a failed test or the sting of a small injury. The kind of sound that comes from somewhere structural, from a place that doesn’t easily recover. Raw and broken and entirely wrong on a day that was supposed to be a celebration.“Dad.” Her voice fractured on the single syllable. “She annihilated them.”I was already out of my chair. “Isabella. Breathe. Tell me what happened.”“Mom shredded my cap and gown.” The words came out between gasps, her breathing ragged with the rhythm of a panic attack fully in progress. “There are just strips everywhere. Blue fabric everywhere. She left a note on my pillow.”My hand went white around the phone. “What did the note say?”A long pause, just her unsteady breathing. Then, barely above a whisper: “It says I’m not her daughter anymore. It calls me a failure.”