For a year, I hunted for answers while the one secret I had buried sat at the heart of it all. I thought hiding the truth would protect my daughter, but when her missing phone returned, I learned my fear had led her into a lie bigger than mine.
For a year, people told me not to give up hope. But hope becomes cruel when it has nowhere to land.
Then, late one night, Lucy’s best friend appeared on my porch with my daughter’s missing phone in her hand.
“Look at the last photo,” she said. “Lucy wanted you to know the truth.”
My legs nearly gave out before I even touched the screen.
It showed the secret I had locked away.
And it proved my daughter had not disappeared from the lake.
She had run from me.
Lucy had always been bright and social, singing too loudly in the car and chatting with cashiers like they were old friends.
But recently, she had grown distant. Almost cold.
At first, she blamed homework.
“You’re 15, not 40,” I told her one Saturday morning, placing blueberry pancakes on the kitchen island. “You can’t be this tired from algebra.”
She did not smile.
“I’m not hungry, Mom.”
“It’s Saturday. We always do pancakes.”
“Things change.”
I leaned against the counter. “Lucy, what happened?”
“Nothing.”
“That isn’t true.”
She looked up from her phone. “Would you ever lie to me because you thought it was better that way?”
My fingers tightened around the plate.
“What kind of question is that?”
“Just answer it.”
I swallowed. “Mothers protect their children.”
Lucy let out a small, bitter laugh. “Right. Protection.”
Then she walked away.
That night, I checked the bottom drawer of my dresser. The folder was still hidden beneath my winter sweaters. I unlocked it with the tiny key behind an old jewelry box.
Inside were Lucy’s adoption papers, one letter I had never given her, and a silver baby bracelet.
On the back was one word.
“Lulu.”
That was what Elijah and Agnes had called her before she became mine. They were Lucy’s biological parents.
I had always meant to tell Lucy when she was ready.
But by 15, I knew the truth was not about her readiness.
It was about my fear.
I was afraid she would want Elijah and Agnes. Afraid she would see me as a woman who had been handed a child, not as her mother.
I closed the folder.
“What’s that, Mom?”
I spun around.
Lucy stood in my bedroom doorway, eyes fixed on the locked drawer.
“Nothing,” I said too fast. “Just some old paperwork.”
“If it’s nothing, why did you jump?”
“You startled me.”
“You never locked that drawer before.”
“What’s that, Mom?”
I slipped the key into my palm. “I’m allowed to have private things.”
“So am I,” she said. “But when I hide something, you call it attitude.”
“What do you think I’m hiding, baby?”
“I don’t know yet.”
Her eyes moved past me to the drawer. “Is it about me?”
My throat tightened.
“Pack for your trip,” I said softly.
Her face shifted. “That’s an answer.”
She backed away. “I can pack myself.”