I thought my husband was the perfect father — loving, attentive, always tired from “work.” But when our daughter’s drawings turned dark, and she whispered what she saw him bury in the yard, everything unraveled. I used to think my life was something out of a storybook. I met William at the local library — cliché, I know.
I was thumbing through a gardening book. He was lost in the history section. We bumped into each other near the coffee cart.
“Let me guess,” he said, catching my falling latte, “you’re more roses than revolutions?”
I laughed. “And you’re definitely revolutions.”
That moment turned into coffee, then dinner, then marriage. Years of love, laughter, and late-night whispered dreams.
William was the steady one. Calm. Patient.
And with Emma—our daughter—he was a soft puddle of love. “Want sparkles on your pancakes, Daddy?” she’d ask. “For you?
Always,” he’d say, already reaching for the glitter sprinkles. But lately, something’s been… off. Emma’s light dimmed.
She stopped wearing her sparkly skirts. She barely touched her food. And she started drawing—a lot.
Not her usual rainbows and fairy wings. These were different. Heavy.
Dark. At first, I didn’t think much of it. Emma had always gone through phases — one week she’d only eat peanut butter sandwiches with the crusts cut off, the next she insisted on wearing her purple rain boots everywhere, even to bed.
I figured the strange drawings were just another one of her quirks, something fleeting and harmless. But deep down, I knew this felt different. The light in her eyes had dulled.
Her laughter, once so constant it echoed through the house, had grown rare and quiet. Still, I told myself not to overreact. She was just a kid — kids go through things, right?
Then I got the call. “Hi, this is Mrs. Silverton,” her kindergarten teacher said.
“Could you come in? I’d like to talk with you about Emma.”
There was something tight in her voice, polite but cautious, and my stomach tightened in response. When I arrived at the school, she greeted me with a smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes and gestured for me to sit.
She slid a yellow folder across the table toward me with the kind of slow, deliberate movement people use when they’re about to say something you won’t want to hear. “I don’t want to alarm you, Jennifer,” she began, “but something is going on with Emma. Something that concerns us.”
I opened the folder and froze.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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