He performed his role flawlessly.
Now and then, one of the older women from the neighborhood would glance at me, seeming to remember I was Laura’s father, only to drift back toward Daniel, pulled in by the elegance of his sorrow. I watched the quiet theater of it all—the bowed heads, the sympathetic looks, the soft voices saying, “So tragic,” and “She was far too young”—and something in me recoiled. Not because pain can be measured, but because I knew exactly what was hidden behind his carefully controlled facade.
During the entire service, Daniel barely acknowledged me. His gaze skimmed past me as if I were just another object in the room. The few times our eyes met, there was no softness there. If anything, his expression hardened, as though my presence irritated him even on the day we buried Laura.
The priest spoke about faith, eternal peace, and Laura having “gone home.” I heard only pieces of it. My mind kept drifting through old memories—her first bicycle, the day she broke her arm falling from a tree, the long stormy night we stayed awake together because thunder terrified her. When the priest sprinkled holy water over the casket and the droplets rolled down the wood, it felt like watching what remained of my life wash away.
When the ceremony ended, people slowly started to leave. Some paused to grip my shoulder and offer the usual words—“Stay strong, Antonio,” “Call if you need anything,” “She’s in a better place.” I nodded without really hearing them.
Then I saw Daniel by the doors, accepting one final round of sympathy.
And then he came toward me.
He walked with quiet precision, his face blank, like a man who had already made up his mind and was only waiting for the right moment to announce it.
“Antonio,” he said softly.
It was the first time he had spoken directly to me all day.
“We need to talk.”
There was no warmth in his tone. No shared grief. No recognition of what we had both lost. It was the voice of someone handling a practical matter, as if he were summoning an employee into his office. Still, I followed him, because I was too drained to do anything else.
We stepped away from the remaining mourners and stopped near a side aisle beside an old wooden confessional that smelled faintly of dust and polish. Colored light from the stained-glass windows spilled across the floor. For a brief moment, I thought perhaps he was about to say something decent. Something about Laura. Something about how we might endure the days ahead.
Instead, he said the words I will never forget.
“You have twenty-four hours to leave my house.”
The sentence didn’t erupt. It landed with the cold finality of a judge’s ruling.
His voice never rose. There was no anger in it—just a calm, efficient order delivered on the day we laid my daughter to rest. His eyes were steady, detached. He sounded like a man concluding a transaction.
Something twisted sharply inside my chest. It wasn’t shock exactly. Daniel’s cruelty had never been loud; it had always been smooth, measured, and deliberate. But even knowing who he was, part of me still struggled to believe he would choose that moment to cast me out.