At 15, I was kicked out in a storm because of a lie my sister told. My dad yelled, “Get out of my house. I do not need a sick daughter.” I just walked away. Three hours later, the police called. Dad turned pale when…

“Can you imagine these words?”

Those were the last syllables my father wasted on me before he shoved me into the teeth of an October gale and threw the deadbolt.

“Get out of my house. I don’t need a sick daughter.”

I was fifteen years old. I had no coat, no cell phone, and no money. I possessed only a JanSport backpack containing a half-finished algebra worksheet and a granola bar wrapper. The rain was already soaking through the canvas of my Converse sneakers, turning my toes into blocks of ice.

Three hours later, the police would call him. When he heard what Officer Daniels had to say, the blood would drain from his face, leaving him the color of old parchment. But by then, the damage had been etched into the timeline of our lives. It was way too late for regret.

I am Sher Walls. I am twenty-eight years old now, sitting in a high-rise apartment in Boston, watching a nor’easter slide aggressively down the double-paned glass. There is a letter sitting on my quartz kitchen island. The handwriting is shaky, spider-webbed across cheap nursing home stationery.

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