My son, Noah, vanished after school, and for seven days, I searched while my husband told me to stay calm. Then Noah’s teacher called about an assignment he’d left behind for me. The first line warned me not to tell his father until I knew the whole truth.
My son, Noah, was the kind of kid who texted me if the bus was running six minutes late.
So when he walked out of school on a Monday afternoon and didn’t come home, I knew before everyone else that something was wrong.
Daniel, my husband, said I was panicking too soon.
“He’s sixteen, Laura,” Daniel said, his tie loosened.
“He probably went somewhere with friends and forgot to text. Breathe.”
I stared at my son’s untouched plate of spaghetti. I’d made extra garlic bread because he always ate two pieces after baseball practice.
“Noah doesn’t forget me.”
Daniel rubbed his forehead.
“You can’t say that like he’s six.”
“He still texts me every morning.”
“That’s because you trained him to do so!”
I called Noah again.
It went straight to voicemail.
“Hi, this is Noah. Leave a message, unless this is Mom, in which case, I’m probably already texting you back.”
I’d laughed the first time he recorded that. That night, the sound of his voice made my knees weak.
“Noah,” I said after the beep.
“Call me, sweetie. I don’t care what happened. Just call me.”
***
By eight, I’d called Ethan, three kids from baseball, the school office, and every parent whose number I’d saved.
By ten, I was at the police station with Noah’s school photo in my hand.
The officer looked tired before I even finished.
“Teenagers take off sometimes, ma’am.
Unfortunately, that’s just how it is.”
“Not my Noah.”
Daniel put a hand on my shoulder. “Laura.”
I shook him off. “He was last seen leaving school.
His phone is off. He has no jacket. He didn’t take his charger.
He didn’t even take his baseball glove.”
The officer softened a little. “We’ll file the report. We’ll check the school cameras.”
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