The summer I turned ten, my younger sister vanished. She disappeared on her way to drop off lunch for our parents. There were no security cameras, and no one saw her. Because I was the one who was supposed to deliver that food, my mother never spoke another word to me. Fifteen years later, I became a police officer, retracing the exact route my sister took that day over and over again. The past slowly resurfaced in my mind, piece by piece. Gradually putting together a truly heartbreaking truth. 01 August 10, 2009. The day my sister went missing. Back then, we lived in a run-down trailer park on the industrial outskirts of town. My father, Robert, worked as a laborer at the nearby chemical plant. My mother, Susan, ran a busy roadside convenience store. During the summer, lots of people stopped by the store to buy ice cream and cold drinks around noon, so my dad would go help out after his morning shift. They were always so busy they rarely had time to stop and eat. Because of that, almost the entire summer, I was the one making lunch for the whole family. I was ten years old. The kitchen had no air conditioning, only a single, beat-up box fan. Once the water on the stove boiled, the steam filled the room, and the fan only blew hot air around. Whenever I cooked, I was drenched in sweat. The day it happened, it was exceptionally hot. After I finished making the food, I felt like I was getting heatstroke. There was no one else home. My grandmother, Mary, lived in the house right next door to our lot, but she was a harsh, bitter woman. Not only would she refuse to help, but she’d also hurl insults at me, so I never dared to bother her. I splashed cold water on my face, pushed through the nausea, and served my sister, Lily, a bowl of cold pasta salad so she could eat first. Then I packed my parents' portions into Tupperware and loaded them into a tote bag. Lily took a few bites of her pasta and looked up at me. "Chloe, you lie down in front of the fan. I’ll take the food to them today. I know the way. I’ll finish the rest of my lunch when I get back." It was a ten-minute walk from our house to the store. There was only one dirt road, and it wasn’t completely isolated. I had walked it with her more times than I could count. Still, I was uneasy. "Are you sure you can carry it?" I asked, half-lying on the couch with a wet rag pressed to my forehead. "I'm fine! Don't worry, Chloe. It's a short walk. I'll be right back." Without giving me a chance to argue, she grabbed the bag and headed for the door. Because she was chronically ill, Lily was incredibly frail. When she gripped the bag, the bones in her shoulders jutted out. Her tiny silhouette looked so fragile from behind. Right before she stepped out, she turned and waved. "I'll be right back! You better not steal my pasta while I'm gone!" "Don't worry, I won't eat it!" I waved her off impatiently, urging her to go. But she never came back. 02 "Do you think... if I had told her I was going to steal her food, she would have hurried back?" On January 9, 2024, I officially joined the city police department as a rookie officer. Eight months later, I found myself talking to my mentor, Detective Miller, about the cold case that had tortured me for fifteen years. "When did you realize she was gone?" Detective Miller asked. I rubbed my tired eyes. "Around 2:00 PM. After she left, I forced down a bite of food and fell into a deep sleep. I woke up to my dad slapping me across the face." Even though it had been years, I remembered it vividly. The moment I opened my eyes, I was met with my father’s violently angry face. "Why the hell didn't you bring us our food?! Are you trying to starve us?!" I burst into tears. "Lily went to deliver it ages ago!" It was only after I said it that I noticed her half-eaten bowl of pasta still sitting on the table. It suddenly hit me that Lily hadn't returned. A freezing chill crawled up my spine, and the sheer terror sucked the tears right out of my eyes. 03 We searched everywhere. Back then, the security camera grid hadn't expanded to the back roads; only the main highway had surveillance. Our family ran around like headless flies, searching frantically. The police dragged the nearby pond three times. Nothing. They hired people to lower cameras into the drainage pipes and local wells. Nothing. After we officially filed a report, the police checked the highway footage and found no suspicious persons. They canvassed the neighbors and residents from the adjacent neighborhoods. Not a single person had seen her. Lily had simply vanished. My mother beat her fists against my chest, collapsing onto the dirt, sobbing hysterically. "Why are you so lazy?! If you had just taken the food yourself, she wouldn't have gone!" My grandmother, a strict religious fundamentalist, declared that the Lord would never forgive a selfish, lazy child who lost her own sister. In a fit of rage, my father kicked me five or six times, sending me sprawling to the ground. The neighbors didn't know the full story, so no one stepped in to stop him. They just pointed their fingers at me, whispering. Like a wooden puppet, devoid of a single tear, I walked to the dirt road where Lily disappeared. I stood there stubbornly for three days, refusing to blink, staring at the intersection, desperately hoping her tiny figure would appear. But no miracle came. After that incident, my family barely spoke to me. My mother, in particular, never said another word to me for the next fifteen years. By middle school, I moved into the dorms. I’d come home on weekends, grab my allowance and clean clothes, and leave immediately. I didn't dare stay a minute longer than necessary. Over the years, I walked the route she took to deliver that food countless times. I stared at every blade of grass, every single tree, hoping to find a clue, imagining a million different scenarios. It was absolute torture. 04 "How long did your afternoon naps usually last?" Miller asked, flipping through the old case file I had dug up. Back then, it was classified as a standard missing persons case, left to gather dust for over a decade. "It varied. Sometimes long, sometimes short. But that day, I felt abnormally exhausted. I slept for over two hours, right up until my dad hit me." "You said you had heatstroke. Do you remember what it actually felt like?" I tried hard to recall the physical sensations of that noon. "Lethargy. Extreme drowsiness. Dizziness. My head felt incredibly heavy..." Miller listened, then fell silent for a moment. "Has it ever occurred to you that you might not have had heatstroke at all?" My scalp prickled. I stared at him, my eyes wide. "The symptoms of heatstroke are dizziness, headaches, muscle weakness, nausea, vomiting, and cold sweats," Miller explained. "Your symptoms don't sound like heatstroke. They sound like you ingested..." My heart dropped. Before he could even finish, I blurted out, "Ingested what?" "Sleeping pills. Or some kind of strong sedative," Miller said, giving me a meaningful look. Why hadn't I thought of that? The symptoms of sedative ingestion and heatstroke do overlap in some ways. But heatstroke has two very distinct trademarks: nausea/vomiting and cold sweats. I remembered that day perfectly—I didn't have either! The hairs on my arms stood straight up. 05 Back then, the adults—including the police—just assumed I was a lazy kid making excuses to avoid walking in the heat. Everything I said was dismissed as a child trying to dodge responsibility. They focused all their energy on searching for a missing person. And because of that, they missed a massive, glaring clue. "Boss, what made you realize it wasn't heatstroke?" The case finally had a breakthrough. I was trembling with adrenaline. "It’s simple. From the way you talk about her, it's obvious you and your sister had a deeply bonded relationship. She was little, walking alone, and you were incredibly worried about her. Under normal circumstances, you would have fought to stay awake until she got back safely. But instead, you passed out hard. You slept for over two hours, and if your dad hadn't hit you, you probably would have slept longer. Obviously, that wasn't natural." My eyes burned. I nodded. In all these years, Miller was the very first person to notice that the bond between me and my sister was extraordinary. When Lily went missing, my dad pointed his finger in my face and screamed: "What kind of older sister are you?! She goes missing and you just sleep through it?! Why didn't you just die in your sleep?!" Back then, I couldn't understand why I had fallen asleep so heavily. I hated myself just as much as they hated me. No one knew how much I loved her. No one knew that our bond went far beyond normal siblings. It wasn't just because we spent 24 hours a day together before I started grade school. It was because, through freezing winters and scorching summers, we only had each other to rely on. Because my parents were always working at the store, they left us at home to be watched by our grandmother. But Grandma was a religious fanatic, constantly running off to church gatherings and prayer circles, leaving us alone in the house all day, completely neglected. Because of that, I learned to cook on the stove when I was six. If I burned the rice, we ate burnt rice together. If I cooked it perfectly, we shared the perfect meal. When other kids cried, they called for their mothers. But when Lily cried, she called for me. 06 "You were sweating heavily that day, which means you probably drank a lot of water. The problem was most likely in your cup," Miller said, pointing at the mug on my desk. "But who would drug a ten-year-old? And why?" I couldn't help but ask. As I said it, two horrifying possibilities flashed through my mind, each more despairing than the last. "Did your family have any enemies?" I shook my head. "My parents were all about keeping the peace for their business. The only person who had a grudge against us was the local town creep, but the police confirmed he had a solid alibi that day." Just then, a commotion erupted in the precinct lobby. A couple had come in to report their child missing. "Officer, please! Our daughter is eight. She's severely autistic. My husband was taking her to her therapy session, and she wandered off on the way! You have to help us!" The woman was frantic, practically dropping to her knees. The husband looked despondent, loudly blaming himself, but there was an unmistakable look of relief hiding in his eyes. Seeing this, I knew exactly what was going on. I hadn't even been on the force for a year, but I had already seen cases like this several times. Usually, it involved a special-needs child. The parents couldn't afford the medical bills, or they simply couldn't handle the lifelong emotional and physical toll. Seeing no hope, they intentionally abandoned the child. But to avoid being judged or investigated, they'd come to the police station to put on a theatrical performance. Despite knowing this, I dutifully took down the husband's statement. "We were walking past the boardwalk at the beach. She saw people feeding the seagulls and got hyper-fixated. I couldn't pull her away. So I turned around to buy a bag of birdseed from a kiosk, and in that split second, she vanished." The child allegedly went missing around 5:00 PM, which perfectly coincided with high tide at the beach. They claimed they searched everywhere before coming to the police, meaning it had already been over two hours since she "vanished." If she fell into the ocean, it only took minutes to drown. If she was taken by a trafficker, two hours was more than enough time to reach the interstate or a train station. It was too late. Even so, the police department couldn't just ignore it. Miller ordered me to issue an immediate Amber Alert, blasting it across social media using the beach as the radius epicenter. He dispatched a squad to all major transit hubs and contacted two professional search-and-rescue teams to scour the coastline through the night. We did everything humanly possible. The rest was up to fate. 07 After the couple thanked us profusely and left, Miller looked out at the pitch-black night sky. "The odds of that kid being alive are slim to none. It's only a matter of time before a body washes up." He turned to me. "Your sister had severe asthma, right? Is it possible that..." I shook my head frantically, denying it. "No! My family never saw her as a burden. After Lily went missing, I became the ultimate sinner of the house. My mom hasn't spoken to me in fifteen years." He studied me, tapping his pen against the case file. "What about your grandmother? How did she treat you two?" I flinched. "You suspect my grandma?" It was true—if it wasn't an enemy, the only people who had access to my water cup to slip in a sedative were my parents or my grandmother. "Not entirely. I'm just considering all possibilities and analyzing the case," Miller replied. "Honestly, she treated us terribly. But that day, she had an airtight alibi. People testified she was at a neighbor's house for a prayer circle." Miller fell silent for a moment, then asked, "Are you absolutely sure no one saw your sister on that road?" "That dirt road was mostly abandoned, especially at noon in the dead of summer. There were only three shacks along the path. Two were dive bars that didn't open until nightfall. The third was a boiled peanut stand run by a blind man. He lived in the shack, but he never opened for business at noon. So, no. No one saw her." Miller shook his head repeatedly. "That is bizarre. This case really defies logic." If even Miller was stumped, the hope that had just ignited inside me was extinguished. I stared at the photo of the missing autistic girl on my computer screen. She was the same age my sister was. She had the same big, dark eyes. My heart felt like lead. Seeing my despair, Miller encouraged me: "Chloe, don't give up. As long as a body hasn't been found, there's hope she's alive. Try to remember the details. In police work, we rely on intuition and meticulousness. If someone did something, they left a trace. Go back to your old neighborhood when you have time. See if it jogs your memory." I nodded.

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