Too Late To Call Me Daughter
When I was having a heart attack, my parents, my brother, and my fiancé were all at our family casino—celebrating Eva, our adopted daughter, at her twenty-first birthday, her official debut into the mafia world.
The doctor refused to operate without a legal guardian’s signature.
So I called them.
My father’s assistant answered. “Sorry, Miss. The Don is in the middle of a toast.”
My brother and mother let it ring until it went silent.
Finally, my fiancé, Adam, picked up. Music roared behind him. I could hear laughter, glasses clinking.
“Cecilia,” he said, impatient. “If you can’t even show up for Eva’s party, stop causing trouble. Today is Eva’s debut. Every Don from three territories is here. Whatever drama you’re playing can wait.”
I lost count of how many times they chose her over me.
So after this call, I stopped calling. I signed my own name.
My family thought I’d finally learned to be obedient. But they should’ve known that in our world, silence only means one thing—I was preparing to disappear for good.