He came back from summer camp a whole new kid—confident, shaved head, that tie-dye shirt he wouldn’t take off. “I made it in Cabin Six,” he said proudly. Later, while doing laundry, I noticed faded names scribbled inside the collar.
One was underlined twice. I Googled it—and the first result was an article titled, “Boy Missing From Cabin Six Since…”
I froze right there in the laundry room, the hum of the dryer suddenly sounding louder than usual. My heart pounded as I read the headline again, making sure my eyes weren’t playing tricks on me.
It was an old news clipping, dated twelve years ago. The boy’s name matched the one scribbled underlined twice in the shirt’s collar. He had vanished one night at camp, never to be found.
I stared at the tie-dye shirt in my hands, trying to steady my breathing. My son, Ryan, was only ten. He had returned from camp happier than I’d seen him in years—laughing more, talking more, standing taller.
And here I was, holding something that connected him to a child who had never come home. When I asked him casually about the shirt, Ryan just shrugged. “We all made them on the last day.
Cabin Six shirts. Everyone signed each other’s.” That seemed harmless enough, except the names weren’t written in Sharpie by kids that summer. They were faded, almost washed out, like they’d been there for over a decade.
I didn’t want to scare him, so I dropped it for the moment. But later that night, after he’d gone to bed, I went back to my laptop and dug deeper. The missing boy’s name was Evan.
He was twelve when he disappeared. According to the article, he had last been seen heading to the lake after lights out. His shoes were found on the dock, but he never returned to the cabin.
No body was ever recovered. The next morning, I decided I needed answers. I called the camp under the pretense of asking about lost-and-found items.
The woman who answered sounded cheerful, but when I asked specifically about Cabin Six and the tie-dye shirts, her tone shifted slightly. “Cabin Six doesn’t exist anymore,” she said. “We closed it years ago.
Where did you say your son stayed?”
I swallowed hard. “Cabin Six,” I repeated. There was a long pause.
“Ma’am, are you certain? Cabin Six was boarded up after… after the incident. Campers don’t stay there.”
I hung up, my hands shaking.
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