I sent my teenage daughter to my mother-in-law for Easter, thinking she’d be safe. At 2:14 a.m., a sheriff called and told me my daughter was at the station. He wouldn’t say what happened. I raced there, preparing for the worst. Because my heart told me this wasn’t a call I’d ever forget.
I sat straight up in bed, my heart pounding. Lily was supposed to be at her grandmother, Kathy’s, house for Easter break, safe in the guest room.
Instead, a sheriff called me and told me to come to the station immediately, and my mind ran wild before he could say anything else.
“Is she hurt?” I asked.
Instead, a sheriff called me and told me to come.
There was a pause, just long enough to make me feel sick.
“Ma’am, your daughter is here,” the officer then said. “She is safe right now. But I need you to come in.”
Safe right now. Those words made it worse. When someone says “right now,” all you hear is what might’ve happened five minutes earlier.
I was out of bed before the call ended. I called my mother-in-law, Kathy. No answer. Her phone rang and rang until voicemail picked up with that same stiff little greeting she refused to change.
“Ma’am, your daughter is here.”
Every unanswered ring quickened my pulse.
Kathy had insisted that Lily spend Easter with her.


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