She was just a lost little girl in the park. But when I saw what was hanging around her neck — the locket my mother wore the day she vanished — I knew my world was about to change.
I was thirty-five, unemployed, with a weird résumé even I had stopped believing in.. I turned into my own shadow.
From a successful designer… to a woman who couldn’t get past the first round of interviews.
“You’ve got solid experience… and this is…what, some kind of… speech thing?”
That’s what I wanted to say. But most of the time, I just nodded. The stutter started the day my mother walked out the door and never came back.
She just said:
And then, she vanished. No note. No call.
I searched the neighborhood. Called every hospital. Walked the tree line near the bridge.
Filed a police report. Then, three years passed.
Time kept moving, but I stayed frozen, waiting for a phone that never rang.
My friend Rachel tried to drag me out of that fog every time she came by.
I nodded.
“You need to do something. Anything.
Start small. Go for a run. It’s not about fitness.
Start tonight.”
“They s-said there m-might be a sto-storm,” I whispered, scrolling through the forecast on my laptop.
“People run in the rain, in the heat, in the snow. What’s stopping you?”
And so, there I stood on the doorstep, staring at the sky. Heavy, low clouds loomed overhead.
“Thi-this isn’t an ex-excuse.
It’s j-just the wind,” I said aloud. “If I ski-skip on da-day one, I won’t come back. So I go.”
I stepped outside.
The street was nearly empty.
I started jogging.
One step, then another. Slow. Then I ran.
Past dim alleys, closed-up cafés, and the old playground.
I almost passed it when… Something made me stop.
A little girl was sitting on the swing.
She couldn’t have been older than three. Alone.
In a thin jacket. Her legs didn’t reach the ground. She simply swayed back and forth.
I walked toward her, slowly.
I wasn’t good with kids. But I had to try.
She looked up at me. Curious about my ill-timed stutter.
“A-a-are you here… alone?” I glanced around.
No one. The wind picked up. “Listen, I d-don’t w-want to s-scare you,” I said softly, crouching down to her level.
“B-but y-you really can’t s-stay out h-here alone. It’s n-not s-safe.”
The girl shifted on the swing.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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