My daughter called me crying, “Dad, please come get me.” When I arrived at her in-laws’ house, her mother-in-law blocked the door and said, “She’s not leaving.” I pushed past her—and the moment I saw my daughter on the floor, I realized this wasn’t “family drama.” It was something they’d been hiding on purpose. They thought I would leave quietly. They had no idea the fury of a father was about to burn their entire world to the ground.

It wasn’t a ring; it was a siren slicing through the thick, comfortable silence of my bedroom. I was halfway into a dream about fishing on the lake, the water glass-calm, when the harsh digital trill yanked me back to reality. I groaned, rolling over to check the screen, expecting a wrong number or perhaps a dispatch call—old habits from my days as a paramedic die hard.