Almost a year after my teenage son disappeared, I saw a homeless man walk into a café wearing my son’s jacket — the one I had patched myself. When he said a boy gave it to him, I followed him to an abandoned house. What I found there changed everything I thought I knew about my son’s disappearance.
The last time I saw my 16-year-old son, Daniel, he was standing in the hallway pulling on his sneakers, backpack hanging off one shoulder.
“Did you finish the history assignment?” I asked.
“Yes, Mom.” He grabbed his jacket, then leaned over and kissed my cheek.
“See you tonight.”
Then the door closed, and he was gone. I stood at the window and watched him head down the street.
That evening, Daniel didn’t come home.
I didn’t worry at first.
Daniel sometimes stayed late at school to play guitar with friends, or drifted over to the park to hang out until dark.
He always texted me when he did that, but maybe his phone had died.
I told myself that while I made dinner, while I ate it alone, while I washed up, and left his plate in the oven.
But when the sun went down, and his room was still empty, I could no longer ignore the feeling that something was wrong.
I called his phone. It went straight to voicemail.
By ten o’clock, I was driving through the neighborhood, searching for him.
By midnight, I was sitting in a police station to report him missing.
The police officer asked questions, took notes, and eventually told me, “Sometimes teenagers leave for a couple of days. Arguments with parents, that sort of thing.”
“What do you mean?”
“Daniel is kind and sensitive.
He’s the kind of kid who apologizes when someone bumps into him.”
The officer gave me a sympathetic smile. “We’ll file a report, ma’am.”
But I could tell he thought I was another panicked parent who didn’t know her own kid.
I never could’ve imagined how right he was.
***
The next morning, I went to Daniel’s school.
The principal was kind.
She let me watch the security footage from the cameras that covered the main gate.
I sat in a small office and watched the video from the previous afternoon.
Groups of teenagers poured out of the building in clusters, laughing, pushing each other, checking their phones.
Then I saw Daniel walking beside a girl.
For a moment, I didn’t recognize her. Then she glanced over her shoulder, and I got a clearer look at her face.