For nearly a year afterward, I drove to the lake almost every day after dropping Lily at school.
I’d sit behind the wheel staring across the water, convinced that if I looked long enough, somehow the lake would finally answer me.
One afternoon I got out of the car and screamed all three of their names into the wind until my voice gave out.
Eventually, I stopped going.
Not because I’d healed.
But because the place itself began to feel merciless.
I packed away every framed lake photograph because I couldn’t bear turning corners and seeing smiling versions of the people I never truly got to say goodbye to.
Still, life moved forward whether I wanted it to or not.
Lily grew older.
Bills needed paying.
Homework still had to be checked.
Soccer uniforms still needed washing.
I learned how to survive around the empty space my family left behind.
I thought that was simply what the rest of my life would be.
Then last weekend, Lily walked into my room holding an old pink phone.
And everything changed.
It happened after dinner.
I was folding laundry while half-watching television when Lily appeared quietly in the doorway.
“I found this in one of the closet boxes,” she said softly. “The charger was still there too.”
She swallowed hard.
“I started looking through old games and pictures from when I was little… and then I found something else.”
I immediately sensed something was wrong.
“What is it, sweetheart?”
Her eyes filled with tears.
“Mom… Dad sent me a video the night before they left.”
The laundry slipped from my hands.
“What?”
“He told me not to show you until ten years had passed,” she whispered. “I was only six. I forgot all about it after they disappeared.”
Her voice cracked.
“He said you might hate him once you saw it.”
My hands trembled as she gave me the phone.
I pressed play.
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