My husband Derek had just left for a business trip when my six-year-old daughter tugged my sleeve with trembling fingers and whispered words that would shatter everything I thought I knew about my life: “Mommy… we have to run. Now.”
It wasn’t the dramatic whisper children use during games of make-believe, when they’re pirates escaping imaginary enemies or princesses fleeing dragons. This was something older, something primal—the kind of fear that bypasses childhood innocence and speaks directly to survival instinct.
I was standing at the kitchen sink rinsing breakfast dishes, my hands submerged in warm soapy water, watching the Seattle morning rain streak down the window above the faucet. The house still smelled like the French roast coffee Derek preferred and the lemon-scented cleaner I used obsessively when I needed the illusion of control. My husband had kissed my forehead at the door exactly thirty-two minutes earlier, his wheeled suitcase trailing behind him, saying he’d be back Sunday night from the technology conference in San Francisco.
He’d looked almost cheerful. Almost relieved. That should have been my first warning.
Lily stood in the kitchen doorway in her purple unicorn socks, gripping the hem of her pajama shirt so tightly her knuckles had gone white. Her dark hair—the same shade as mine—was tangled from sleep, but her eyes were wide awake, shining with tears she was desperately trying to hold back. “What?” I laughed, the sound hollow and automatic, because my brain was trying to protect itself from whatever was coming.