By the time I turned into my driveway, the sun over the Bay had already dropped behind the row of skinny eucalyptus trees that lined our street. San Francisco had that washed-out, end-of-day light where everything looks honest. My duplex, my postage-stamp yard, the narrow strip of concrete I called a driveway.
The spot where my car should have been.
The space was empty. No pearl white SUV.
No sleek curved roofline. Just a dark smear of oil where the tires usually rested and a faint outline on the concrete like a chalk body at a crime scene.
For a second my brain refused to cooperate.
I had just finished another eighty-hour week at the data center, stumbling home on autopilot with a backpack full of laptops and laundry. My hands still smelled like cheap office coffee and server-room dust. The numbers in my life always balanced.
Assets mapped to owners.
Keys mapped to locks. Nothing simply disappeared.
But the one thing in my life I had paid for entirely on my own, the one thing that didn’t have my father’s fingerprints all over it—a one-hundred-and-ten-thousand-dollar electric SUV—was gone. My heart didn’t race.
My throat didn’t close.
What I felt instead was a cold, precise click, like a line of code compiling. I pulled my phone from my pocket and hit the first number my thumb knew by muscle memory. My father answered on the second ring, his voice thick with that familiar mix of arrogance and Marlboro smoke.
“Gracie.
You finally off work? I was just about to call you.”
I didn’t bother with hello.
“Where is my car, Dad?”
There was a pause. Not the stunned silence of someone hearing bad news.
The guilty hesitation of a man deciding how much of the lie to serve first.
Then he laughed. Actually laughed. A short, dismissive bark like I’d just asked if he’d borrowed my stapler.
“Relax,” Douglas Rossi said.
“You act like it’s gone forever. Tyler needed it.
Family helps family.”
The words slid through the speaker and lodged under my ribs. I pictured my younger brother behind that wheel—Tyler, who’d racked up more traffic citations than job applications, who’d had his license suspended after his last “little misunderstanding” involving a stop sign and a parked BMW.
I swallowed once.
“Does he still have that suspended license,” I asked, keeping my tone flat, “or did you decide that part didn’t count because it’s family?”
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