At 4:07 a.m., I caught my seventeen-year-old daughter sneaking home after prom. She froze when she saw me waiting in the dark. Then her purse hit the floor, spilling something onto the hardwood.
One look at it, and I felt my stomach drop.
The clock on the mantle ticked louder than it had any right to. Midnight came and went, and Ellie still wasn’t home.
I told myself she was running late. Prom always ran over, didn’t it?
The after-party probably went longer than planned. Teenagers lose track of time.
But Ellie didn’t lose track of time.
That was the thing.
My daughter was the kind of kid who texted me if she was going to be ten minutes late from the library.
She had never missed a curfew in her life.
She got good grades and stayed out of trouble.
By one in the morning, I had texted her twice. No reply.
I texted again. The little “delivered” notification never appeared.
I started pacing and tried desperately to come up with a reasonable explanation for what could’ve happened to my daughter.
I thought back to how she had come downstairs in her prom dress earlier that day, and my heart had forgotten how to work for a second.
“Well?” she had asked, twirling once.
“Acceptable?”
“Mom, please don’t say unreal. Nobody says unreal.”
I had taken twenty photos before she finally held up her hand and laughed.
But I had noticed that her smile had a strange edge to it.
I had almost said something.
Now, sitting alone in the dark, I wished I had pushed harder.
At four-oh-seven in the morning, the front door handle turned with the slow, deliberate care of someone trying to be silent.
I stayed perfectly still on the couch.
Ellie tiptoed into the hallway in her bare feet, heels dangling from one hand, her prom dress wrinkled and dirty at the bottom.
Her hair, so perfectly pinned hours earlier, had come loose entirely.
Her purse hung off her other arm.
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