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Too Late, Dad: I'm Dead Because You Trusted Her Novel Cover

Too Late, Dad: I'm Dead Because You Trusted Her

On her eighteenth birthday, a young woman is brutally murdered by her stepmother, Sheila, and her secret lover. To hide the crime, Sheila transforms the victim's remains into a macabre bone sculpture for her husband. Influenced by years of lies, the father dismisses his daughter's disappearance and publicly disowns her. However, his cold indifference shatters into total insanity when the gruesome reality of her death is finally exposed in this chilling modern horror story.
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Chapter 3

That night, Dad was clearly distracted. He kept lifting his phone, wavering over whether to call me at all.

Seeing this, Sheila immediately broke down in tears. "In the end, you still care more about your own daughter. I'm just an outsider here. I've been married into this family for years, and they still whisper behind my back, calling me a homewrecker. She ran off right before my birthday on purpose, just to make me look like a fool."

Dad hurried to calm her down, then had every one of my things thrown into the trash, as if I were trash myself.

On the seventh day after I disappeared, the city was hit by an unprecedented typhoon. The streets were littered with fallen trees, and flooded cars were abandoned everywhere.

Sheila threw a party at home that day, bringing in a swarm of guests. Dad hovered among them, holding someone else's child, teasing them, and smiling with a jealous pride he would never show me.

He liked children. He just didn't like me.

The torrential rain eventually washed my body out. Someone found it and called the police. The forensic team pieced my remains back together, but my left lower leg was missing.

Based on the birthmark on my arm, the police cross-checked every missing person in the city and released a public notice asking for identification.

Mary held the notice tightly, her face filled with worry. "Mr. Wade, Ms. Wade has a birthmark like this too. We should go check."

Dad's face darkened over the photo of the birthmark.

Before he could say a word, Sheila cut in. "Mary, stay quiet if you don't know the truth. You see a dead body and immediately claim it's Raena's. How much did she pay you to pull this stunt?"

Mary's face turned pale. "I'm just worried about Ms. Wade. She's still young."

"Young? What do you mean, young?" Sheila snapped. "Hasn't she done enough damage already? Mary, you've been with this family for years. Raena is childish, but don't tell me you're childish too? If she's already like this now, who knows what she might be capable of later? She could hurt someone or even set a house on fire, and you're helping her lie. That ingrate was never raised right, and now she even knows how to play the victim."

After being married to Dad for so many years, Sheila knew exactly how to manipulate him.

Sure enough, Dad's expression hardened. He slammed his hand on the table and roared, "Mary, stop speaking up for that ingrate. She's been rotten since she was a child. I fed her, clothed her, and raised her. Do I owe her anything? It's one thing to be ungrateful, but she dares to defy me at every turn. This time, unless she kneels and apologizes, I will never forgive her."

He didn't care about where I'd run to or if I were dead or alive. All he wanted was for me to admit I was wrong, but I refused. I hadn't done anything wrong.

Sheila wore a smug smile. Dressed to the nines, she announced that she was heading out to meet her friends. As soon as she turned away, she stepped straight into William's arms and complained, "That little bitch really is nothing but trouble. She even got washed out. I should have burned her body from the beginning. What if she gets identified? What if it leads back to us?"

"Relax," William said, soothing her. "I cleaned everything up. No one will find out. Without evidence, it will be a cold case. Besides, Richard hates that daughter of his so much. Even if he finds out she is dead, he will not care that much. Once things die down, we can figure out how to get rid of that idiot."

He was right. Even if Dad knew I was dead, he wouldn't care.

Whenever Dad struck me at Sheila's urging, forcing me to my knees, I could feel the full weight of his contempt. As a child, I had seen him as the greatest man alive. Now, I saw only a fool.