**The Long Road**
My name is Marcus Thompson. I became a father at seventeen.
It was 2008. I was a scared kid in a maroon graduation gown, holding a tiny baby girl with chubby cheeks and curious eyes. Ainsley was only four months old that day. Her mother, Kayla, stood off to the side taking pictures, smiling like everything was going to be fine. I believed her.
We were young and dumb and in love. When Kayla told me she was pregnant, my world flipped upside down, but I didn’t run. I stepped up. I worked nights at a fast-food place, studied during lunch breaks, and still managed to walk across that stage with my daughter in my arms for photos. Everyone called me crazy. My own parents begged me to let Kayla’s family take the baby. I refused.
“I got this,” I told them.
I didn’t have it. Not really. But I was going to learn.
**The Abandonment**
Two years after high school, Kayla sat me down in our tiny one-bedroom apartment.
“I can’t do this anymore, Marcus. I’m only nineteen. I want to go to college, travel, live my life. Ainsley… she’s holding me back.”
I begged. I cried. I promised to work harder. But the next morning, she was gone. She left a short note, her key on the table, and never looked back. Not a single birthday card. Not one phone call. She disappeared into her new life and left us behind.
From that day on, it was just me and Ainsley.
I worked two, sometimes three jobs. Days at a warehouse, nights doing security, weekends fixing cars for neighbors. I learned how to braid hair by watching YouTube videos at 2 a.m. I burned dinner more times than I can count. I cried in the bathroom when Ainsley had nightmares and I didn’t know how to make them stop. I showed up to parent-teacher meetings in dirty work boots, smelling like motor oil and exhaustion.
But every single night, I tucked her in and whispered the same promise:
“Daddy’s got you, baby girl. Always.”
She grew up believing it.
**Eighteen Years**
Ainsley became everything I could have dreamed of and more.