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My name is Ray Keller. I’m 56 years old and I found out my own stepdaughter was trying to steal my life in a bank conference room with a pair of white earbuds sitting on the table between us like a loaded gun. The room was quiet enough that I could hear the hum of the air vent above my head.
Megan kept talking fast—defensive, angry—but I wasn’t listening anymore. All I could see were those earbuds. Cheap plastic smudged from fingerprints.
I live in Toledo, Ohio, on the quiet side of town, where the houses all look like they were built by the same tired man in the 70s. Aluminum siding. Short driveways.
Lawns that turn brown every August no matter how much you water them. I work as a facility supervisor at St. Nan’s Regional Hospital, which is a fancy way of saying I keep the place from falling apart.
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