I froze, the tiny gold locket trembling in my hand. My breath caught as I recognized the delicate engraving — a pattern of tiny roses I had chosen myself 13 years ago. My husband had given it to our daughter, Emily, on her fifth birthday. My fingers fumbled to open it, and when I did, my heart nearly stopped. Inside was a faded photograph of the three of us — me, my husband, and Emily — taken just weeks before they vanished.
I turned to the girl, my voice shaking. “Where… where did you get this?” Her eyes filled with tears, but she didn’t answer. Instead, she pulled up her sleeve. There, on her arm, was a small scar — the same crescent-shaped mark Emily had gotten when she fell off her bike all those years ago.
“Mom?” she whispered, her voice breaking. The teacup slipped from my hand, shattering on the floor. My knees gave out, and she rushed to catch me. I held her, afraid to let go, afraid this was a cruel dream.
Through sobs, she told me pieces of the nightmare — how a man had taken them, how she’d been moved from place to place, never knowing what happened to her father. She had escaped during the storm, following the lights of my farmhouse… and Lucky’s barking had led her the rest of the way.
We stayed there on the kitchen floor, holding each other as the wind howled outside. The storm no longer mattered. After twelve empty years, my little girl had come home.
And somewhere out there, I knew, her father’s story was still waiting to be found.