Something shifted among the trees.
At first, I convinced myself it was only the wind.
A squirrel.
A deer.
Anything except what my father seemed to fear.
But the fox had already risen to its feet.
Its ears flattened.
A low growl vibrated through the clearing.
Ben slowly stepped closer to me.
“Naomi,” he said quietly.
“I see it too.”
My father tried to stand.
Pain twisted across his face.
“Get the cabinet,” he whispered.
“Now.”
I stared at him.
“Dad, what’s happening?”
“There isn’t time.”
His voice cracked.
“Please.”
The urgency in his eyes terrified me.
I rushed into the cabin.
The metal cabinet stood against the far wall exactly where he had pointed.
Its surface was scratched and rusted with age.
My hands trembled as I pulled the handle.
Locked.
“Dad!”
“Top drawer.”
I reached above the cabinet and found a small key taped underneath.
My pulse raced.
The lock clicked open.
Inside were folders.
Boxes.
Photographs.
Legal documents stacked so tightly that some spilled onto the floor.
And at the very top sat a thick envelope with my name written across the front.
Naomi.
My knees nearly buckled.
Everything suddenly felt real.
Whatever secret my father had been carrying for twenty years wasn’t paranoia.
It existed.
I grabbed the envelope and several folders before rushing back outside.
The moment I stepped onto the porch, I froze.
Two men stood at the edge of the clearing.
Neither looked surprised to see us.
As if they already knew exactly where to find the cabin.
My stomach dropped.
One was tall and gray-haired.
The other younger.
Both wore expensive jackets completely out of place in the wilderness.
The older man took a slow step forward.
“Hudson.”
My father’s face turned white.
The name sounded less like a greeting and more like a threat.
“You shouldn’t have contacted her.”
Every hair on my arms stood up.
My father squeezed my hand.
“Naomi.”
I looked down.
His eyes were filled with fear.
Not for himself.
For me.
“They told me they were done searching.”
The older man smiled.
But there was no warmth in it.
“We were.”
His gaze shifted toward the envelope in my arms.
“Until you decided to create a problem.”
Ben stepped between us instinctively.
“That’s close enough.”
The younger man laughed.
“You have no idea what you’re involved in.”
“Then explain it.”
Ben didn’t move.
Neither did the stranger.
The clearing felt suffocating.
My father suddenly began coughing.
Violently.
The fox pressed against his legs.
I dropped beside him.
“Dad.”
His breathing was ragged.
Painful.
The older man watched silently.
Without concern.
Without compassion.
As though my father’s suffering was merely an inconvenience.
And that terrified me more than anything else.
“Naomi.”
My father struggled to speak.
“Open the envelope.”
Right there.
Right now.
My fingers tore through the seal.
Documents slid into my lap.
Old court filings.
Custody petitions.
Private investigator reports.
Letters.
Dozens of letters.
Every one of them centered around me.
My heart pounded harder with every page.
Then I saw the names.
My aunt.
My uncle.
The people who raised me.
The people I trusted.
The people who spent twenty years telling me my father abandoned me.
They had been part of it.
All of it.
The custody battle.
The lies.
The disappearance.
Everything.
“No.”
The word escaped before I could stop it.
“No.”
Tears blurred the pages.
The signatures were real.
The dates were real.
Every horrible detail was real.
My father hadn’t vanished because he stopped loving me.
He vanished because powerful people convinced him he would lose me forever.
And then they spent decades making sure I never knew the truth.
The older man sighed heavily.
“You should put those down.”
I looked up.
For the first time, anger overwhelmed the shock.
“You lied to me.”
He didn’t deny it.
“You were a child.”
“You stole my father.”
His expression hardened.
“We protected your future.”
The same excuse.
The same justification.
The same lie.
My father had heard it twenty years earlier.
Now I was hearing it too.
And suddenly I understood exactly why he had run.
The fox stepped forward.
Its growl deepened.
The younger man shifted nervously.
The animal’s eyes never left them.
For a long moment nobody moved.
Then distant sirens echoed through the trees.
Everyone froze.
Ben slowly lowered his phone.
“I called them fifteen minutes ago.”
The younger man’s face changed instantly.
The older man’s confidence vanished.
My father managed the faintest smile.
The first genuine smile since I had arrived.
“You always were smarter than I was.”
Ben squeezed my shoulder.
The sirens grew louder.
Closer.
The men exchanged a glance.
Then turned and disappeared into the forest without another word.
Silence returned.
Only now it felt different.
Lighter.
As though something heavy had finally lifted.
I looked at my father.
Really looked at him.
The man I had spent twenty years mourning.
The man I had spent twenty years blaming.
The man who never stopped loving me.
His hand found mine.
Weak.
Cold.
But still there.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered.
Tears streamed down my face.
“For what?”
“For missing so much.”
I squeezed his hand tighter.
“You’re here now.”
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
The fox settled quietly beside us.
The trees swayed gently overhead.
And for the first time in twenty years, I wasn’t wondering where my father had gone.
I was simply grateful that I had finally found him.