I Heard My Daughter Whisper “I Miss You, Dad” on the Phone—Her Father Has Been Gone for 18 Years

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I buried my husband when our daughter, Susie, was only three months old.

He never got to see her crawl. Never heard her laugh. Never held her hand on the first day of school. From the moment he died, it was just the two of us against the world. I learned how to be strong because there was no other choice. I learned how to smile through exhaustion, how to stretch one paycheck into two, how to answer questions like, “Where’s my dad?” without breaking apart.

Susie grew up knowing her father only through stories, photos, and a few old voicemail recordings I couldn’t bring myself to delete. She was gentle, thoughtful, and far more introspective than other kids her age. Sometimes I’d catch her staring at his picture on the mantel, her fingers tracing the frame as if it were a doorway.

Still, I never imagined what would happen when she turned eighteen.

It was an ordinary evening. Dishes done. Television murmuring in the background. I was walking past the hallway when I heard Susie’s voice—soft, careful—coming from the landline phone we barely used anymore.

“Okay, Dad,” she whispered.

A pause.

“I miss you too.”

I stopped cold.

My heart slammed so hard I thought I might faint. Before I could say anything, she noticed me. Her eyes widened. She hung up immediately, the click of the receiver sounding far too loud in the quiet house.

“Who were you talking to?” I asked, trying to keep my voice steady.

“No one,” she said too quickly. “Wrong number.”

She fled to her room, closing the door with a gentleness that somehow hurt more than if she’d slammed it.

That night, sleep wouldn’t come. My thoughts raced in tight, panicked circles. Susie had never lied to me—not like that. Curiosity and fear twisted together until I couldn’t stand it anymore. I went to the kitchen and checked the landline’s call log.

The number wasn’t familiar.

With trembling fingers, I dialed it.

It rang three times.

Then… breathing.

Not heavy. Not threatening. Just quiet, steady breathing, like someone holding themselves still.

“Hello?” I said.

The silence stretched. Then a man’s voice—low, hesitant.

“Susie?”

My stomach dropped.

“This is her mother,” I said. “Who is this?”

Another pause. I could hear emotion in the way he exhaled.

“My name is Daniel,” he said finally. “I… I knew her father.”

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