Before, I was just a mother driving along Route 9 with my seven-year-old son, Daniel, listening to him beg for a Sprite. Then, in less than two minutes, everything changed. I stepped into a rest stop to buy the drink, and when I returned, he was gone. Police, volunteers, dogs, and helicopters searched tirelessly, but as time passed, the effort faded and Daniel became another unsolved case.
For years, I avoided Route 9 completely. The memories were too painful. Then last Tuesday, a traffic accident forced my GPS to reroute me onto that same highway. Twenty miles later, my tire blew out. Sitting on the shoulder, overwhelmed by grief, I cried until a knock on my window startled me. An older man offered to help and quietly changed the tire.
When he finished, he looked at me with sad eyes and softly said, “Take care now, Margaret.” My heart stopped. I had never told him my name. Before I could question him, he walked away toward the trees. Back inside my car, I discovered a Polaroid on the passenger seat. It showed a little boy who looked exactly like Daniel. Written on the border was an address and my name.
I immediately called the retired sheriff who had led Daniel’s case years earlier. After seeing the photo, he warned me not to visit the address alone, explaining it was connected to a former Route 9 maintenance worker who had once been questioned. But I couldn’t wait for answers. I drove straight there and soon arrived at a small, ordinary house with toys in the yard and a truck in the driveway, wondering if the truth about my son had been hidden there all along.