The footage showed Charlotte at a gas station late that night, long after she had said she escaped the fire. A grainy timestamp blinked in the corner, and my stomach dropped as I leaned closer. “This doesn’t make sense,” I whispered, but Brooke’s voice cut through the silence. “She wasn’t at home when the fire started, Dad. She left.”
Charlotte’s face drained of color. For a long moment she couldn’t speak, then finally her voice came out barely above a whisper. “I wasn’t in the house,” she admitted. The room went completely still. “I had a fight with my father that night… I got in the car just to calm down. I drove around for hours. When I came back, the house was already on fire.”
I stared at her, trying to piece together everything I thought I knew. “So you told me you escaped from it?” I asked, my voice shaking. Tears filled her eyes instantly. “I didn’t want people to think I abandoned them… I thought if I had stayed, maybe I could’ve stopped it somehow.” Her words weren’t defensive—they were broken, heavy with guilt she had been carrying alone for a year.
Brooke slowly lowered her phone, her expression shifting from certainty to doubt. “Dad… I thought I was protecting you,” she said quietly. But all I could see was Charlotte standing there, trembling beside a birthday cake she had worked so hard on, a child who had already lost her parents once and then spent a year losing them again in her mind. And suddenly, the truth wasn’t about betrayal at all—it was about a girl who never forgave herself.