Short
No Longer His Little Girl

No Longer His Little Girl

By:  Piglet at SunriseCompleted
Language: English
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After seven years of marriage, my husband, Marcus Doakes, gave every bit of his tenderness to his divorced first love and her daughter. From then on, I began teaching my own daughter to call him "Mister." When my daughter had an asthma attack and her little face turned blue from lack of air, one phone call from his first love saying, "Jacey is scared of the dark," was enough to make him leave. I covered my daughter's eyes and told her to whisper, "Goodbye, Mr. Doakes" At the parent-child piano competition my daughter had been looking forward to for ages, his first love cried that Jacey had no father to accompany her and was too afraid to go onstage. He turned and left without hesitation. I swallowed the ache in my chest and told my daughter, who had lost her chance to perform, to thank "Mr. Doakes" for coming to watch. Every time, my daughter could only wipe her tears silently in my arms. Later, he seemed to finally realize how much he owed us. For once, he canceled his business banquet and offered to take us to the amusement park for the weekend. But right at the amusement park entrance, his first love called again. "Marcus, the children at the amusement park are laughing at Jacey because she doesn't have a dad. Can you come pick her up...?" When I saw the pity and hesitation flash across his face, he had just crouched down to explain to our daughter. This time, before I could say anything to remind her, my daughter let go of his hand on her own. With tears still shining in her smile, she stepped back obediently. "It's okay, Mr. Doakes. Go protect that little sister. "I have the cotton candy Mommy bought me. That's enough."

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Chapter 1

Chapter 1

Watching Marcus Doakes hurry away, I didn't shed a single tear.

I held Nora's hand and turned toward the curb to hail a cab.

The car was quiet.

Nora sat in the back seat, still clutching the half-eaten cotton candy in her hand.

At a red light, the cab stopped.

Nora suddenly rolled down the window and calmly removed the pink Minnie Mouse headband from her hair.

It was the souvenir Marcus had bought her at the amusement park entrance before we set out.

She didn't hesitate at all.

With one clean flick, she tossed it straight into the trash can by the road.

The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror and said in surprise, "Little girl, why throw away such a pretty headband?"

Nora didn't look at him.

She only watched the street blur past outside the window, her voice young but steady. "It's dirty. I don't want it anymore."

I looked at how practiced that movement was, and my heart ached.

I knew very well.

She wasn't only learning to call him Mister.

She was also learning to cut off the last bit of hope she had for a father's love.

When we got home, I walked straight into the study.

I opened the computer, entered the password, and clicked into the encrypted folder.

The printer began to rumble.

Two documents slid out.

One was my transfer confirmation to the Melbourne branch.

The other was Nora's school withdrawal and transfer application.

Half a year ago, using the excuse that I wanted to take Nora to an Australian summer camp, I'd had Marcus sign all the documents needed for overseas travel. He hadn't even looked at them.

I placed the papers in a kraft envelope and sealed it.

Then I dragged a chest-high cardboard box out of the storage room and began sorting.

In the closet, every piece of clothing Marcus had bought, even the couture princess dresses Nora had never worn once, went into the box.

In the toy chest, every stuffed animal Marcus had casually bought as a way to brush her off was thrown away.

Nora stood at the doorway, holding her little bunny plush.

She watched me stuff the giant Barbie castle into a trash bag.

It was the gift Marcus had asked his secretary to buy at random for her birthday last year.

"Mom."

"Mm?"

"That castle takes up too much space. Throw it away."

There wasn't a trace of reluctance in her voice.

"Okay."

I tied the trash bag shut and pushed it outside.

At eight that night, Clara Lane's social media updated right on time.

The photo was of fireworks blooming over the fairytale castle at the amusement park.

In the picture, Marcus was carrying Jacey on his shoulders, smiling with indulgent affection.

Clara leaned against his side, half her body pressed close to him.

The caption read: "Jacey said today was the first day she didn't feel like a poor little girl with no dad to protect her. Thank you to someone special, who always shows up first and becomes our mother-daughter superhero."

Marcus had liked it instantly.

In the past, seeing a post like that would have made me call Marcus right away.

I would have screamed my questions into the phone.

I would have stayed awake all night.

But tonight, I looked at the screen and felt nothing.

I calmly tapped Like.

Then I opened Clara's and Marcus's chat windows and muted them both.

After her bath, Nora walked over in her pajamas.

She climbed onto the bed and accidentally caught sight of my phone screen.

The fireworks in the picture were dazzling.

She didn't cry or make a fuss.

She only pulled the blanket over herself like a sensible child.

"Mom."

"Mm?"

"When are we going to Australia to see kangaroos?"

She blinked, her voice very soft.

"That mister isn't coming, right?"
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