I Adopted a 3-Year-Old Girl After a Fatal Crash – 13 Years Later, My Girlfriend Showed Me What My Daughter Was ‘Hiding’

I Adopted a 3-Year-Old Girl After a Fatal Crash – 13 Years Later, My Girlfriend Showed Me What My Daughter Was ‘Hiding’

“Just answer me.”

She sat up straighter, defensive now. “No. Why would I?”

My hands were shaking. “Something’s missing from my safe.”

Her face shifted… first confusion , then fear, then anger. And that anger was so quintessentially Avery it almost broke me.

“Something’s missing from my safe.”

“Wait… are you accusing me, Dad?” she retorted.

“I don’t want to,” I said honestly. “I just need an explanation. Because I saw someone in a gray hoodie go into my room on the security footage.”

“Gray hoodie?” She stared at me for a long moment, then stood up and walked to her closet. She pulled out empty hangers, pushed aside jackets, then turned back to me.

“My gray hoodie,” she said. “The oversized one I wear all the time. It’s been missing for two days.”

I blinked. “What?”

She stared at me for a long moment,

then stood up and walked

to her closet.

“It disappeared, Dad. I thought I’d left it in the laundry. I thought maybe you washed it. But you didn’t. It’s just gone.”

Something cold and heavy settled in my chest. I stormed back downstairs. Marisa was in the kitchen, calmly pouring herself a glass of water like she hadn’t just detonated a bomb in my living room.

“Avery’s hoodie has been missing,” I revealed.

Marisa didn’t flinch. “So?”

“So that could be anyone in the video.”

She tilted her head, annoyed. “Are you kidding me?”

Something cold and heavy settled in my chest.

I stared at her. “Wait a second… what safe code did you see entered in that footage?”

Her mouth opened, then closed. “What?”

“Tell me the code,” I repeated slowly.

Her eyes flashed. “Why are you interrogating me?”

Suddenly I remembered something. Marisa had joked once about how “old-school” I was for having a personal safe. And she’d insisted we install a security camera “for safety” because my neighborhood was “quiet, but you never know.”

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