“Daniel is gentle and thoughtful. He’s the kind of kid who apologizes when someone bumps into him.”
The officer gave me a polite, sympathetic smile. “We’ll file a report, ma’am.”
But I could tell he assumed I was just another worried parent who didn’t truly know her child.
I had no idea how wrong that assumption would turn out to be.
The following morning I went to Daniel’s school.
The principal was compassionate and allowed me to review the security footage from the cameras by the front gate.
I sat in a small office and watched the video from the afternoon before.
Students streamed out of the building in groups, laughing, shoving one another, checking their phones.
Then I spotted Daniel walking beside a girl.
At first I didn’t recognize her. But when she turned her head slightly, I saw her face clearly.
“Maya,” I murmured.
Maya had come by our house a few times before. Quiet girl. Polite, almost cautiously so.
In the footage, they exited the gate and headed toward the bus stop. They boarded a city bus together.
Then they disappeared from view.
“I need to talk to Maya,” I said to the principal. “Is that possible?”
“Maya isn’t enrolled here anymore.” She pointed at the screen. “She transferred suddenly. That was her last day.”
I drove straight to Maya’s house.
A man answered the door.
“Can I speak with Maya, please? She was with my son the day he disappeared. I need to know if he mentioned anything to her.”
The man studied me silently for a moment. Then something in his expression hardened.
“Maya isn’t here. She’s staying with her grandparents for a while.” He started closing the door, then paused. “I’ll ask her if she knows anything.”
I stood there uncertainly, a feeling deep in my gut telling me I should push further — but I didn’t know how.
Then the door closed.
The weeks that followed were the most painful of my life.
We printed flyers, posted on every community board, and shared Daniel’s photo across social media.
The police searched too, but as months passed their efforts faded. Eventually people began referring to Daniel as a runaway.
But I knew my son.
Daniel wasn’t the type to disappear without a single word.
And no matter how long it took, I would keep searching.
Almost a year later, I was in another city for a business meeting. Slowly, I had forced myself back into something resembling normal life — work, grocery runs, Sunday phone calls with my sister.