For 23 years, my brother existed only in photographs. Then I saw him in an airport coffee line, older but unmistakably alive. When I shouted his name, he froze, looked straight at me, and ran. Why would my missing brother run from me?
My brother Rob was 17 when he disappeared.
I was 11.
That meant I was old enough to remember him clearly, but young enough to believe, for a while, that missing people could simply walk back through the front door if everyone waited hard enough.
Rob was not the kind of boy people expected to vanish.
He was funny, protective, and impossible to beat at any game involving a deck of cards.
He taught me how to ride a bike by running behind me down Maple Street, shouting, “I got you, Nate!” long after he had already let go.
He was the person I ran to when our parents fought.
The person who slipped me cookies before dinner.
The person who once punched a senior named Travis for shoving me into a locker.
“Nobody messes with my brother,” he told me afterward.
Then one afternoon, he left our parents’ house to meet friends downtown.
He never came back.
There was no goodbye, no notte, and no phone call.
The police searched for months.
Volunteers combed forests, rivers, and abandoned buildings. Posters with his senior picture went up in gas stations and grocery stores.
My mother went door to door until her voice disappeared.
Nothing.
Eventually, everyone reached the same heartbreaking conclusion.
He was gone.
But my mother never did.
She kept his bedroom exactly the way he left it. Same navy comforter. Same basketball trophies. Same stack of comic books on the nightstand.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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