I raised six children alone after my wife left us for a better life. Twelve years later, she returned to our son’s birthday with diamonds, excuses, and a brand-new Mustang. I thought my son might finally get the apology he deserved, but the box he handed her said everything he couldn’t.Twelve years earlier, my ex-wife had walked out on six children after I caught another man’s name lighting up her phone. That afternoon, my son took her keys, looked at the car, and handed her a dusty box from under his bed.That’s when Melissa finally stopped smiling.I’d spent that afternoon trying not to burn burgers while keeping our backyard from turning into a circus.
“Dad,” Sophie called from the porch. “Lily says my ponytail looks like a squirrel moved in.”I turned from the grill. My youngest stood with one side of her hair drooping and the other tied so tight that her eyebrow looked surprised.”Lily isn’t wrong,” I said.Sophie gasped. “Wow. Betrayal.””Come here, honey.”She stomped over, but she leaned into my hand when I fixed it. I was fifty-two, and I could change oil, grill for twenty people, and tell which kid was lying by the way they said “technically.”Caleb laughed beside the grill and nudged my arm. “Relax, Dad. It’s just a birthday.”