After a double shift at the hospital, I walked in and my 7-year-old daughter was missing. My mother said, “We voted. You don’t get a say,” while my sister cleared out my child’s room like it was a seizure. I didn’t scream. I stayed calm—and what I said next terrified them.

After a double shift at the hospital, I walked in and my 7-year-old daughter was missing. My mother said, “We voted. You don’t get a say,” while my sister cleared out my child’s room like it was a seizure. I didn’t scream. I stayed calm—and what I said next terrified them.

By the time Emily Carter turned into the cracked driveway of her parents’ home in Dayton, Ohio, night had already settled in. She had just come off a double shift at Miami Valley Hospital—fourteen straight hours under fluorescent lights, with alarms blaring, coffee spilled, and families asking questions no one could answer with frightened eyes. All she wanted was to pick up her seven-year-old daughter, Lily, bring her home, and sleep for six uninterrupted hours.

Instead, the porch light was glowing, the front door stood open, and Lily’s pink backpack rested on the step with its zipper torn halfway open. Emily’s pulse shifted immediately.

She walked inside, still dressed in navy scrubs and hospital sneakers. “Mom?”

Her mother, Patricia, stood in the living room with arms crossed, her jaw clenched so tightly the tendons in her neck stood out. Emily’s father, Ronald, hovered near the fireplace, flushed and stiff. From the hallway came the sharp sound of drawers being yanked open and shut.

Emily looked past them. “Where’s Lily?”

No one replied at first.

Then Patricia said, in a voice so cold it barely sounded human, “She’s gone.”

Emily stopped breathing for a fraction of a second. “What does that mean?”

“It means,” Patricia said, “we voted. You don’t get a say.”

Emily stared at her.

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