My Daughter ‘Went to School’ Every Morning – Then Her Teacher Called and Said She’d Been Skipping for a Whole Week, So I Followed Her the Next Morning

My Daughter ‘Went to School’ Every Morning – Then Her Teacher Called and Said She’d Been Skipping for a Whole Week, So I Followed Her the Next Morning

« You have got to be kidding me! »

I was out of my car so fast that I didn’t even close the door behind me.

I marched toward the pickup truck. Emily saw me first. She was laughing at something he’d said, but her smile dropped the moment we made eye contact.

I marched up to the driver’s side window and rapped my knuckles against the glass.

Slowly, the window lowered.

« You have got to be kidding me! »

« Hey, Zoe, what are you doing— »

« Following you. » I braced my hands against the door. « What are you doing? Emily is supposed to be in school, and why on earth are you driving this? Where’s your Ford? »

« Well, I took it to the panel beater, but they didn’t— »

I sharply raised my hand. « Emily first. Why are you helping her cut school? You’re her father, Mark, you should know better. »

Emily leaned forward. « I asked him to, Mom. It wasn’t his idea. »

« But he still went along with it. What are you two up to? »

« Why are you helping her cut school? »

Mark raised his hands in a placating gesture. « She asked me to pick her up because she didn’t want to go— »

« That’s not how life works, Mark! You don’t just opt out of the ninth grade because you don’t feel like it. »

« It’s not like that. »

Emily clenched her jaw. « You don’t get it. I knew you wouldn’t. »

« Then make me get it, Emily. Talk to me. »

Mark looked at Emily. « You said we were going to be honest, Emmy. She’s your mom. She deserves to know. »

Mark raised his hands in a placating gesture.

Emily lowered her head.

« The other girls… They hate me. It’s not just one person. It’s all of them. They move their bags when I try to sit down. They whisper ‘try-hard’ every time I answer a question in English. In the gym, they act like I’m invisible. They won’t even pass me the ball. »

I felt a sudden, sharp pang in the center of my chest. « Why didn’t you tell me, Em? »

« Because I knew you’d march into the principal’s office and make a giant scene. Then they’d hate me even more for being a snitch. »

« Why didn’t you tell me, Em? »

« She’s not wrong, » Mark added.

« So your solution was to facilitate a disappearance? » I asked him.

Mark sighed. « She was throwing up every morning, Zoe. Actual, physical sickness from the stress. I thought I could just give her a few days to breathe while we figured out a plan. »

« A plan involves talking to the other parent. What was the endgame here? »

« She was throwing up every morning, Zoe. »

Mark reached into the center console and pulled out a yellow legal pad. It was covered in Emily’s neat, looped handwriting.

« We were writing it out. I told her that if she reported it clearly — dates, names, specific incidents — the school has to act. We were drafting a formal complaint. »

Emily rubbed her sleeve across her face. « I was going to send it. Eventually. »

« When? » I asked.

« The school has to act. »

She didn’t answer.

Mark rubbed the back of his neck. « I know I should have called you. I picked up the phone so many times. But she begged me not to. I didn’t want her to feel like I was choosing your side over hers. I wanted her to have one safe place where she didn’t feel pressured. »

« This isn’t about sides, Mark. This is about being a parent. We have to be the adults, even when it makes them mad at us. »

« I know, » he said.

« I picked up the phone so many times. But she begged me not to. »

I believed him. He looked like a man who had seen his daughter drowning and grabbed the first rope he could find, even if that rope was frayed and rotten.

I turned back to Emily. « Skipping school doesn’t make them stop, honey. It just gives them power. »

Her shoulders sagged.

Mark looked at me, then at Emily. « Let’s go sort this out together. The three of us. Right now. »

I looked at him, surprised. He was usually the one who wanted to « sleep on it » or « wait for the right vibe. »

« Skipping school doesn’t make them stop, honey. »

Emily blinked, her eyes wide. « Now? Like, in the middle of second period? »

« Yes, » I said. « Before you have time to talk yourself out of it. We’re going to walk into that office and hand them that legal pad. »

Walking into the school felt different with both of us there.

We asked for the counselor.

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