Blogging Life Stories Story

A Text From My Daughter—But She’s Been Gone a Year

I woke up at 3 a.m. to the glow of my phone vibrating nonstop. Seventeen missed calls from my daughter and one text sent a jolt through my entire body: “Dad, help! Come fast!!”

I was out of bed in seconds. I didn’t even put on proper shoes; I just grabbed my keys and drove like a madman through the empty streets. My heart hammered the whole way. A thousand horrible scenarios raced through my mind as I sped to her house.

For illustrative purposes only

When I burst through the door, my daughter and her fiancé looked up from the couch, confused.

“Dad? What are you doing here at this hour?” she asked.

“You texted me! You called me!” I said, holding up my phone with shaking hands.

She frowned. “No, I didn’t.” But when I showed her the message, her face went completely pale. She whispered, barely audible, “Dad… this is Helen’s phone number.”

For a moment, everything around me blurred. Helen. My youngest daughter. The one I lost last year in a car accident. She was only nineteen—my sweet girl with the brightest laugh.

My daughter’s eyes met mine, and we both just stood there, silent, stunned, and aching. I felt that old wound split open again, raw and sharp.

I stepped outside to catch my breath, but before I could pull myself together, another text came through. This time, I froze in place.

“I am still waiting. Where are you?”

For illustrative purposes onlyMy whole body trembled. For a split second—just one impossibly fragile moment—it felt like Helen was reaching out to me from somewhere I could not go.

Hands shaking, I called the number.

A young woman answered immediately, crying. “Dad? Dad, where are you? Please, I need help…”

I swallowed hard. “I’m not your father,” I said gently. “Who are you trying to reach?”

Through sobs, she explained that her car had broken down in the middle of nowhere. She had been desperately trying to reach her dad, but he had recently changed his number. When she tried calling the old one, the contact saved as “Dad” was me—because that number had once belonged to Helen.

I comforted her and stayed on the line until help arrived. Then I sat in my car and cried until sunrise.

For a few heart-stopping seconds that night, it felt like Helen had found a way back to me—if only long enough to remind me that love never really disappears.

Note: This story is a work of fiction inspired by real events. Names, characters, and details have been altered. Any resemblance is coincidental. The author and publisher disclaim accuracy, liability, and responsibility for interpretations or reliance. All images are for illustration purposes only.

Related Posts

I Found a Crying Baby Abandoned on a Bench — When I Learned Who He Was, My Life Changed Forever

The morning I found the baby changed everything. I believed I was simply heading home after another exhausting shift, counting the minutes until I could feed my son...

Between 65 And 80: If You Still Have These 7 Things, You Are Living Well

After the age of 65, life no longer feels like a race. It slowly transforms into something quieter, deeper, and far more meaningful. At this stage, it’s no...

I Gave My Pregnant Neighbor $200 When She Had Nothing—What She Gave Back Changed My Marriage

My pregnant neighbor from two houses down showed up on our porch just after sunset. One hand clutched the railing for balance, the other rested protectively on her...

I Raised My Twin Sons All Alone – but When They Turned 16, They Came Home from Their College Program and Told Me They Wanted Nothing More to Do with Me

When Rachel’s twin sons come home from their college program and tell her they never want to see her again, every sacrifice she’s made is suddenly questioned. But...

My Sister Mocked Me for Getting Nothing in the Will—Two Weeks Later, She Called Me Screaming

When the lawyer finished reading the will, the room fell into silence. Every dollar. Every account. The house I grew up in. Four hundred thousand dollars in savings....

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *