The roar of the highway faded when I saw her face. Officer Sarah Chen had pulled me over for a broken taillight on Highway 49, but when she stepped up to my bike, my chest nearly collapsed.
She had my mother’s eyes. My nose. And the same crescent-moon birthmark under her left ear — the one I used to kiss goodnight when she was only two years old. The daughter who vanished when her mother took her and disappeared without a trace.
“License and registration,” she said firmly, not knowing she was cuffing her own father. My hands trembled as I handed them over. Thirty-one years of searching — police reports, private investigators, every face in every crowd — all led to this moment.
Her name tag read Officer Chen. Of course. Her mother had remarried and given her a new life. But I recognized everything: the scar from her tricycle accident, the way she tucked her hair behind her ear, even the same vanilla-sweet scent she had as a child.
“Step off the bike,” she ordered.
I did, with sixty-eight-year-old knees barely holding me up. She thought she was arresting a stranger. I knew I was staring at my daughter.
When she snapped the cuffs around my wrists, my heart broke and healed all at once. Thirty-one years of pain, longing, and emptiness ended on the side of that lonely highway.
And yet she looked me dead in the eyes and said words that cut deeper than any blade:
“Don’t fool me…”