The diner always felt different at 2 a.m. Quieter. Heavier.
Like the world had exhaled and left only a few of us behind—night shift workers, lost souls, and people with nowhere else to go. That night, I was wiping down the counter for the third time, not because it needed it, but because I didn’t know what else to do. My mind was louder than the silence around me.
Bills. Rent. The empty side of my bed.
It had been three months since my husband walked out, leaving behind more silence than answers. I had picked up extra shifts, told everyone I was “fine,” and learned how to cry quietly—usually in the storage room, where no one could hear. The bell above the diner door suddenly chimed.
I looked up, expecting a truck driver or a regular. Instead, a little girl stepped inside. She couldn’t have been older than eight.
Her thin jacket clung to her like it wasn’t enough for the cold. Her hair was messy, her cheeks tear-streaked, and her small hands trembled as she pushed the door closed behind her. For a second, I just froze.
Then instinct took over. I rushed around the counter and knelt in front of her. “Hey, sweetheart… are you okay?”
She shook her head immediately, lips quivering.
“My parents… they didn’t come back,” she whispered. “They said they’d be back yesterday.”
Something inside my chest tightened. “Do you know where they went?”
She nodded faintly.
“They left me with a neighbor… but when I woke up, no one was there anymore.”
I swallowed the rising panic and forced a gentle smile. “Okay. It’s alright.
Do you have anyone we can call?”
“My uncle,” she said quickly, like she’d been holding onto that answer. “I have his number.”
I guided her to a booth, wrapped her in my spare sweater, and handed her a cup of warm cocoa. Her fingers clung to it like it was the only warm thing in her world.
She recited the number. I called. Once.
Twice. Three times. No answer.
By the seventh call, my stomach was in knots. I turned toward the kitchen, thinking maybe I’d try calling the police next. But when I turned back—
She was gone.
The booth was empty. The cocoa sat untouched, still steaming. My heart dropped.
I rushed outside, the cold air hitting me like a slap. I scanned the street—left, right, across the dimly lit sidewalk. Nothing.
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