Yet Emily never left our lives.
Every birthday.
Every Christmas.
Every anniversary.
Her room stayed exactly as she’d left it.
Ten years after Emily disappeared, everything changed.
Nora received a message from an unknown account.
It simply asked,
“Did your dad stop looking for me after he adopted you?”
My heart nearly stopped.
Another message followed.
“I need to know if he replaced me.”
Then a photograph appeared.
Emily.
Older.
Thinner.
But unmistakably Emily.
Neither of us could breathe.
Nora immediately replied.
“He never stopped searching.”
She sent photos of Emily’s untouched bedroom.
The missing-person posters.
The memorial walks.
The white daisies.
Everything.
Emily answered only once.
“They told me he was happier without me.”
That evening Nora went to meet her.
Hours later she returned home.
She stood outside with tears streaming down her face.
Then she opened the front door.
Behind her stood a woman I hadn’t seen in ten years.
Emily.
I collapsed before I even realized my knees had given out.
“It’s me, Dad.”
I pulled her into my arms.
“I never stopped loving you.”
She cried harder.
“They told me you didn’t want me anymore.”
Emily finally explained everything.
After our argument, she had called her grandparents.
They picked her up and convinced her she should stay with them overnight.
The next morning they lied.
They claimed the search had become so big that returning would only make everyone hate her.
Then they took her to relatives in another state.
Using old family documents and Abigail’s maiden name, they enrolled Emily in a new school under a different identity.
Whenever Emily wanted to contact me, they insisted I had moved on.
When they saw I adopted Nora, they showed Emily only the courthouse photo.
Not the caption explaining I was simply giving an orphan a home.
Emily believed I’d replaced her.
Nora revealed another heartbreaking truth.
Her grandparents had threatened her.
Grant warned that no one would believe an orphan over respected adults.