“She’s Traveling”
That’s what my son-in-law, Michael Reed, told me when I knocked on his door that October morning. He wore the same polite smile everyone trusted.
But his eyes didn’t match it. Not even close.My name is Emily Parker. I’m fifty-five.
And what I’m about to tell you is the most painful truth I’ve ever lived as a mother.
One Week Earlier
It started a week before that visit. My daughter, Sarah Parker-Reed, stopped responding to me.
At first, I told myself she was just busy. She worked at a graphic design agency and lived on deadlines.
Still—Sarah never went more than a day without replying. Never.
So when the silence stretched, something in me tightened.
On Monday morning, I texted: “Sweetie, how are you this morning? Kisses.”
Two blue checkmarks. Read.
No answer.
On Tuesday, I tried again: “Sarah, my love, is everything okay? I get worried when I don’t hear from you.”
Seen.
Nothing else.
By Wednesday, I’d called three times. Voicemail every time.
On Thursday, I sent: “Honey, please answer me, even if it’s just an emoji. I need to know you’re okay.”
Seen again. Silence again.
That night, sleep wouldn’t come. I lay in the dark staring at my phone like it might suddenly explain itself.Message after message. Read, but empty.
The Drive
Friday morning, I decided I was going over there. No warning.
Because mothers don’t always know—but we feel. And I felt something was wrong.
I drove down the highway with a heavy chest. Traffic was thick, the kind that usually irritates me.
That day, I barely noticed.
All I could see were those checkmarks.
All I could hear were those unanswered calls.
I reached their neighborhood around eleven in the morning. It was quiet, leafy, picture-perfect—white fences, neat lawns, the kind of calm that looks like safety.
Because I knew this was only the beginning of a long road.
But I also knew one absolute thing: I would never leave her alone again. Never.