I woke at 2:03 a.m. to my phone lighting up — eighteen missed calls from my daughter and a text that froze my blood: Dad, help! Come fast!! I tore through the dark streets in my pajamas, heart hammering, mind racing through every nightmare a parent can imagine. But when she opened the door, safe and confused, she swore she’d never sent a message. There were no calls, no texts. I tried to laugh it off, until another message appeared: I remember what you did.
What followed were nights of silence broken only by 2 a.m. texts — accusations that sliced through years I thought were buried: You looked the other way. She cried for help. Do your hands still smell like gasoline? The name I had avoided for twenty-five years returned: Sarika. A girl from my hometown, the one my best friend tormented, the one I didn’t defend enough. The one who vanished after the night he tried to set her porch on fire. I stopped him, but I never told the truth. I just buried it, like we all did.
Then came a package — a USB drive labeled BUSH CAM. It showed everything: my seventeen-year-old self grabbing the lighter, Sarika returning later to pick it up, looking into the hidden camera and mouthing thank you… why… go. Her cousin Zubin later told me she’d died years ago, but she’d written about me — about how she wished I’d done more, yet still didn’t blame me. The texts, he said, were his way of forcing me to face it — not to punish me, but to wake me up.
So I went back. To Abingdon. To the school. To the silence we all helped build. And I started The Sarika Project — a program teaching kids how to speak up, how to protect each other, how to be the wall instead of the bystander. The ghosts still visit sometimes, but differently now. My daughter once texted that her friend’s sister got our scholarship. I sat in my car and cried. Because the past will always knock — but now, I finally know how to open the door.