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I’m sixty-three, my body mapped with scars and tattoos — souvenirs from Vietnam, highway life, and too many bar fights. I’ve seen the dark side of humanity, but nothing prepared me for the raw fear in a six-year-old’s eyes when she bolted across the cereal aisle and grabbed my arm.
“Please, mister,” she trembled against my denim. “Please pretend you’re my daddy. Don’t let him take me.”
“Addison!” he barked. “Get over here!”
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