It had been exactly one year since my daughter disappeared from our backyard.
Last week, while going through her things, I found something hidden inside her dollhouse that made me call 911 before I even fully understood what I was looking at.
I wish I could say what happened next brought me peace.
It did… and it didn’t.
I started packing up Nancy’s room last Monday afternoon because I couldn’t afford to keep the house anymore.
It was too big.
Too quiet.
And filled with reminders that hadn’t changed in a year.
Every room held something frozen in time.
A cereal bowl she left on the counter.
Her winter coat still hanging by the door.
A juice box on her nightstand, the straw still inside.
For twelve months, I had walked past all of it without touching a thing—as if moving anything might erase her completely.
Nancy’s father, Shawn, had died just three months before she went missing.
A crash on the overpass.
They didn’t even let me see him at the end.
Nancy was only nine.
The detectives said sometimes children wander after trauma. That grief can push them to do things that don’t make sense.
They brought in search teams. Dogs. Helicopters.
They searched everywhere.
But eventually, the calls slowed down.
The flyers disappeared.
And life, for everyone else, seemed to move on.
My mother-in-law, Cynthia, stopped speaking to me entirely—except for one phone call where she told me, in a cold, sharp voice, that everything that happened was “my fault.”
After that, she cut all ties and moved out of state.
And I stayed.
In that same house.
Waiting.
For a phone call.
A clue.
Anything that meant my daughter wasn’t just… gone.