Fromt then on, he woke up screaming.
We tried therapy. Nothing breached the part of him that believed he had failed her in one careless second.
Then, on what would have been Lily’s seventh birthday, Patrick asked me for a packet of sunflower seeds.
“They were her favorite,” he whispered. “We should still celebrate her.”
So we planted them together behind the farmhouse. The patch was uneven that first year, but Patrick loved it anyway.
It became our tradition. Every spring, Patrick and I spent a Saturday turning the soil and pressing seeds into the ground. Every summer, he sat among the blooms and told Lily everything she had missed.
When he made the baseball team, he told the sunflowers first.
Last Saturday marked six years since we lost her. He woke before sunrise and asked if we could bring fresh lemonade to the garden before the heat set in.
The second we stepped outside, he froze.
Every sunflower had been cut down.
Every one except a single tall stalk standing in the middle of the patch.
Hanging from it by a white ribbon was a small white box.
Patrick looked at me.
My hands were shaking as I untied the ribbon. I opened it, and my knees nearly gave out.
Inside was a photograph of a girl standing beside a roadside sunflower field. She wore a sleeveless yellow dress, her collarbone bare in the sun.
For one wild second, I thought I was looking at Lily.
Patrick took the photograph from me so quickly I could barely react.
He stared at it without blinking.
“Mom,” he whispered. “That’s her.”
I should have slowed down. I should have looked harder. But I looked at that picture and saw the child I had buried in my mind for six years, grown taller and older and somehow real again.
Behind the photograph was a folded note.
It said, “She is alive. Bring $40,000 if you want the truth.”
There was a phone number beneath it.
“Call now.”
I didn’t stop him. I needed to hear someone say her name.
He held the phone on speaker while his hands shook. A man answered on the second ring. His voice was low, careful, almost practiced. He said he knew what happened to Lily and that if we wanted the truth, we needed to bring forty thousand dollars in cash to the Pine Crest Motel the following afternoon.
Patrick could barely get the words out.
The man paused long enough to sound deliberate.
“She’s alive.”
That was all Patrick needed.
He started crying right there in the ruined garden, still holding the photograph. I put my arms around him, but I was crying, too, and neither of us was thinking clearly anymore.
Patrick carried the photograph from room to room as if it would vanish if he set it down. He said maybe somebody had taken her that day. Maybe somebody had found her and kept her. Maybe she had only just learned who she really was.
I listened because I wanted to believe him.
I didn’t tell my parents at first. I wanted one hour to hope with my son.
That lasted less than twenty minutes.
My mother came in from the yard, saw Patrick holding the photograph, and stopped cold.
“Oh my God,” she whispered.
My father said nothing for nearly a full minute.
By noon, the four of us were sitting around the table with the photograph in the middle.
Patrick wouldn’t let anyone doubt.
“What if someone took her that day?” he demanded. “What if she couldn’t get back? What if she only found out later?”
My mother cried quietly and kept touching the edge of the photograph with one finger. My father stared at it for a long time before finally saying, “It looks like her.”
By evening, we had built stories around one picture and one note. We were not stupid. We were grieving. There is a difference, but not a large one when hope gets involved.
I barely slept that night. Patrick didn’t sleep at all. Around two in the morning, I found him at the kitchen table with the photograph.
“I keep trying to remember if her left eyebrow always sat a little higher when she was thinking,” he said.
“What if she’s been waiting for us?”
Looking at my son come alive and come apart at the same time, I became afraid of what this hope would do to him if it were false.
The next morning, we looked at the photograph again in the cold daylight.
My mother was the one who first said it.
Everything in me went quiet.
I took the picture from Patrick and looked harder.
Lily had a small crescent-shaped birthmark near her collarbone.
This girl did not.
Patrick saw my face change.
I didn’t answer quickly enough.
“What?”
I turned the photo toward him and pointed.
For a second, he just stared. Then he shook his head.
“It isn’t.”
“Maybe makeup covered it.”
“Patrick.”
“Maybe the picture was edited.”
His voice kept rising. I believe he could feel the truth coming and hated me for seeing it first.
Patrick looked from one face to another, and realisation finally dawned.
He folded in on himself and covered his mouth with both hands. I had seen him grieve Lily before, and he wasn’t ready for a second time.
I called Detective Harris, the same deputy who had searched for Lily six years earlier and later made sergeant. He came to the farmhouse within the hour. I showed him the note, the photograph, the cut stalks, and the old back gate hanging open.
The flowers had been cut cleanly with shears. Tire tracks marked the damp ground near the gate. Only family and a handful of old neighbors even remembered that the gate led straight to the sunflower patch.
Someone hadn’t just found our wound.
Someone had studied it.
Harris told me to call the number from his phone on a blocked line and keep the man talking. I did. A man with a low, calm voice answered on the second ring. With unbelievable calm, he repeated the instructions about forty thousand dollars and the Pine Crest Motel.
I heard a bell over a door. Then a woman in the background called, “Order for Ray.”
When the man hung up, Harris said, “Ray’s Diner.”
There was only one near the motel.
Harris didn’t like it, but he agreed Patrick could come as far as the diner and stay in the car unless he said otherwise. Patrick sat in the back seat with the photograph face down on his knee. He could barely look at it, yet he wouldn’t let it go.
At the diner, we showed the waitress the picture and said we were looking for a cousin. She looked at it and nodded.
“That’s Emily,” she said. “She helps at Miller’s produce stand sometimes. Lives with her grandmother over in Dalton Ridge.”
Patrick shut his eyes.
We drove to Dalton Ridge. Emily’s grandmother answered the door, saw the photograph, and tried to close it again until Harris showed his badge. Then she let us in.
A man had taken the picture the week before, she said. He had claimed he needed it for a local sunflower festival flyer.
Vince. His face flashed in my mind.
He was seventeen when Lily disappeared, old enough to hear adults talking and old enough to remember what Patrick blamed himself for.
He’d spent so much time searching the pond. Vince would have known about the sunflower tradition and the strip of farmland we’d sold the year before.
With her grandmother beside her, Emily told us one more thing. Vince had asked her to hold a sunflower and look sad. She said he had mud on his shoes and a white ribbon sticking out of his pocket.
Harris set up the motel meeting. Before I got out of the cruiser, he had me repeat the plan twice. Do not improvise. Do not follow Vince anywhere. Do not hand over the envelope unless he gave the signal.
I went in with an envelope full of cut paper and a wire under my shirt. Vince was waiting near the vending machines in a cap pulled low.
He started talking before I said a word. Lily had survived. A woman had taken her in. She remembered the farmhouse porch. She still talked about Patrick, though she called him Pat.
I let him talk.
Then I told him our farmhouse did not have a porch until four years after Lily vanished.
I told him that she had never called her brother Pat. She called him Patch.
Then I said, “I found Emily.”
His face changed.
He tried to laugh.
But I had Emily’s grandmother. I had the photograph. I had his lies on a recording. I had the ribbon, the tracks, and his own story collapsing on itself.
Harris stepped out. Vince ran for the back stairwell and made it three steps before another deputy caught him.
By evening, he was in custody. Later, Harris told us Vince had never known anything more about Lily than the rest of town did. He had remembered Patrick’s guilt, heard about the land sale, and decided grief made us easy. The sunflowers, the ribbon, Emily’s face, all of it had been theater.
When I got home, Patrick was sitting by the ruined garden.
“So she wasn’t Lily,” he said.
He nodded once, staring at the broken stalks.
Then he said, “We need to fix what he messed up.”
The next morning, Emily and her grandmother came to help us clear the cut stems. Emily apologized until Patrick finally said, “You didn’t hurt us. He did.”
We planted new seeds in straight rows. Before we finished, Emily pressed the last one into the dirt herself.
“For Lily,” she said quietly.
Patrick nodded.
“For Lily.”
Then he tied a fresh white ribbon around a small wooden marker and wrote, “For Lily. Still loved. Still ours.”
When he stood up, he didn’t reach for my hand.
