“Daddy, if you leave, the new mommy will give me the medicine again. Save me,” whispered Sofia, clinging tightly to her father. Oleg, shaken, realized something was terribly wrong.

The next morning, he told his wife, Larisa, that he would be going on a short business trip to Brașov.

“I need to go for two days,” he said, watching her reaction carefully. “It’s an important client — I have to handle it in person.”

Larisa simply smiled, her eyes still fixed on her phone.
“Of course, dear. Sofia and I will manage just like always.”

But when Oleg looked at his daughter at the table, he saw her shoulders slump. Sofia said nothing. She refused her food and kept her eyes downcast. When he hugged her goodbye, she clung to his arm and whispered:

“Please, don’t go.”

Oleg stroked her hair and whispered back:
“Trust me. I’m close.”

He drove to the end of the street, parked, and waited in hiding. An hour later, Larisa pulled out of the garage with Sofia in the car. Oleg followed at a distance.

She dropped the girl off at school, but around lunchtime returned to pick her up early. Instead of going elsewhere, she brought Sofia straight back home. Oleg waited thirty minutes before sneaking up to the back door.

The windows were cracked open because of the heat. He could hear everything inside.

“Sofia, eat something and then take your medicine,” Larisa said.

“I don’t want to… that medicine makes me sleepy all the time,” the girl protested.

“The doctor said it’s for your anxiety,” Larisa insisted.

“But Daddy doesn’t even know about any doctor!” Sofia argued.

Alarmed, Oleg peered through the kitchen window. He saw Larisa holding a glass of water in one hand and a box of pills in the other.

“Sofia, don’t make me insist. You know what happens if you don’t behave.”

That was enough. Oleg stormed into the kitchen, his voice firm:
“What is this?”

Startled, Larisa dropped the pills to the floor. Sofia rushed to her father, wrapping herself around his leg.

“Oleg! I… I thought you were on your trip,” Larisa stammered.

“What medicine is this?” he demanded, snatching up the box.

“It’s just a mild tranquilizer, prescribed by the pediatrician…” she tried to explain.

“What doctor? When did you take Sofia without telling me?”

She gave no clear answer. Oleg read the label himself. It was a strong sedative, meant only for adults with severe sleep disorders.

“You were drugging my daughter just to make her easier to handle?” he shouted in rage.

Larisa snapped back:
“Your daughter is unbearable! She cries for you all the time, never listens, throws fits… These pills were the only way to calm her down!”

Oleg’s voice dropped to a cold, steady tone:
“Pack your things. Now. You have one hour to leave this house. If not, I’m calling the police.”

Larisa tried to protest, but she knew she had no way out. She went to the bedroom to pack.

Oleg found Sofia curled up in bed, clutching her wristwatch.
“Is she gone?” the girl asked, tears in her eyes.

“She’s leaving now. And she will never hurt you again,” Oleg said, pulling her into his arms. “I’m sorry, sweetheart. I didn’t know.”

“She said if I told you, you’d send me to boarding school…”

Oleg’s heart broke. How had he missed it?
“That will never happen. I promise. From now on, it’s just you and me.”

In the weeks that followed, Oleg took action. He hired a lawyer for the divorce, arranged with his company to cut back on travel, and started therapy sessions for Sofia.

Slowly, the little girl began to smile again. Her grades improved, she made new friends, and she rejoined her school activities.

One night, before bed, Sofia asked softly:
“Daddy, do you think I’ll ever have a real mom someday?”

Oleg stroked her hair. “Maybe. But we’re not in a hurry. For now, isn’t it enough that we have each other?”

She smiled. “Just us against the world.”

And in that moment, Oleg knew: he would never again allow anyone to hurt his daughter. He would be the father she needed — present, attentive, and protective.

Because the safest place for a child is in the heart of a father who truly loves them.