The biker stared at the officer’s nameplate while she cuffed him—it was his daughter’s name. Officer Sarah Chen had pulled him over for a broken taillight, but when he saw her face, he froze. She had his mother’s eyes, his nose, and the same crescent-shaped birthmark below her ear that he used to kiss goodnight when she was a toddler. Thirty-one years of searching ended in that instant, but Sarah didn’t know the man she was arresting was her father.
Robert “Ghost” McAllister never stopped looking for Sarah after her mother vanished with her in 1993. He filed police reports, hired investigators, and followed every lead, but Amy had planned their disappearance perfectly. With new identities and no trail to follow, father and daughter were lost to each other for decades. Robert never remarried or had more children—he couldn’t, knowing Sarah was still out there somewhere, maybe thinking he’d abandoned her.
Now, at sixty-eight, pulled over on Highway 49, he finally stood face-to-face with her. She was thirty-three, a police officer, strong and professional. When she ordered him off the bike, he obeyed, his heart breaking as he studied every detail—the scar above her eyebrow, the way she tucked her hair behind her ear, the long fingers she’d inherited from his mother. She smelled faintly of vanilla perfume and Johnson’s baby shampoo, the same brand Amy had sworn by when Sarah was a baby.
When she placed him under arrest for suspected DUI, he pleaded that he hadn’t been drinking, but she remained cautious. As she tightened the cuffs, he whispered, “My daughter used that shampoo.” Sarah froze for a moment, suspicion flashing in her eyes. “Excuse me?” she asked. He looked at her, voice trembling: “Johnson’s. The yellow bottle. My daughter loved it.” She stared at him, caught between duty and something deeper she couldn’t yet name.