Rick was different back then, or at least I thought he was.
He worked late in the garage, which he called his workshop, but he didn’t like anyone opening the door without knocking. I told myself that every man needs a quiet corner.
Sometimes my husband would take long drives on Sunday afternoons and return without saying where he’d been. Sometimes his phone would ring, and he’d walk out to the porch, his voice low and his shoulders tight.
“Who was that?” I’d ask when he came back in.
“Just work stuff, Marlene. Nothing to worry about.”
I didn’t worry. I trusted him.
That was the version of me I still miss the most.
Three weeks after her birthday, Hannah left for piano practice with her sheet music tucked under her arm and those little gold earrings catching the sun.
“Straight home after, okay?” I called from the porch.
“I know, Mom!” She turned and waved, and the earrings flashed once before she rounded the corner.
Six o’clock came. Then seven. My friend Denise called to check on our dinner plans, and I told her I’d call her back. Rick paced the living room, checking his phone.
I’d called the piano studio, and Rick had gone to look for her, but they told us she’d left for home after practice.
By eight, I was at the front door in my slippers, staring down our quiet street as the police arrived.
And just like that, the life I knew ended on a Tuesday evening.
The police searched for years.
Ten years passed.
The case went cold, the officers stopped calling, and the world kept spinning as if Hannah had never been in it at all.
Everyone had a theory.
I read every one of those theories until my hands became numb from holding my phone.
Rick wanted me to stop. He said it every year, on her birthday, at Christmas, whenever he caught me staring at her school photo on the mantel.
“Enough living in the past, Marlene,” he’d say. “Let our child rest.”
Denise tried a softer approach. She showed up one Thursday with two coffees and a pamphlet for a grief counselor.
“Honey, you’ve been carrying this alone for a decade,” she said. “Nobody’s asking you to forget her, just to breathe.”
I took the pamphlet, but I didn’t call.
Something deep inside me wouldn’t let go. Call it instinct, stubbornness, or a mother refusing to bury a child she never got to say goodbye to.
That Saturday, I was walking through the local flea market when I saw them. My knees nearly gave out beneath me right there on the pavement!
Hannah’s earrings. The ones Rick designed.
The woman behind the table was middle-aged and tired-looking, sorting through a chipped china set.
“Where did you get these?” I asked. My voice didn’t sound like mine.
She glanced up and shrugged. “Those came in a box of estate things a couple of weeks ago. Don’t know whose exactly. My son does the pickups.”
“Please,” I whispered. “I need them.”
The woman named a price. I didn’t even count the bills.
My hands shook so badly I almost dropped them.
I drove home with those earrings pressed against my palm so tightly that they left marks.
When I walked into the kitchen, Rick was pouring coffee.
My husband turned pale, then red, when he saw them. Then he set his mug down on the counter, slowly and carefully, though I could see the tremor in his hand.
“Why would you bring those into this house?!” he shouted.
I froze.
He looked at them for a long moment. Then he shook his head.
“Those aren’t hers, Marlene,” he said, his voice flat. “Lots of jewelers make piano earrings. It’s a common design.”
“Common?” I said. “You designed them yourself!”
My husband suddenly grabbed the edge of the kitchen counter so hard that his knuckles looked like bone.
“Throw them away! Hannah is dead!”
I couldn’t understand because Hannah was missing, not dead.
Rick wouldn’t quite meet my eyes.
