My daughter, Jordan, is thirteen. That awkward age where she’s no longer a little kid, but not yet grown—she leaves her cereal bowl in the sink like it’s going to magically wash itself, but she rolls her eyes like she’s forty and pays taxes. Jordan has been inseparable from her best friend, Alyssa, since elementary school. I know Alyssa’s mom, Tessa, pretty well—not close enough for wine nights, but enough for carpools and birthday parties that I trusted her.
When Jordan started asking to sleep over at Alyssa’s more often, I didn’t think twice. What started as once a month became every other weekend, and then a steady routine—Jordan packing an overnight bag on Fridays like she was clocking into a second life. At first, I texted Tessa every time, “Jordan’s on her way!” and she’d reply with a quick “Okay!” or “Got her!” Eventually, it stopped feeling like a big deal, and I relaxed. I’d just stand at the door, say the usual: “Be good. Be respectful. Text me if you need me.” Jordan would groan, “I will, Mom,” like I’d embarrassed her just by existing. Easy, normal, safe.
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Until last Tuesday. Jordan had left with her bag when I remembered my birthday was coming up. I decided to invite Tessa over—nothing big, just cake and a few people—and I added a thank-you for letting Jordan stay the night. “Hey Tessa! My birthday’s soon and I’d love to have you over if you’re free. Also, thank you again for letting Jordan stay the night—I really appreciate it.” Ten minutes later, my phone buzzed. It was Tessa.
“Hey… I don’t want to freak you out, but Jordan hasn’t been here in weeks.”
My fingers went cold. “What do you mean ‘weeks’?” I typed, my mind racing. “She’s not at your house?”
“No. She hasn’t been by in weeks. I thought she was with you.”
A pit opened in my stomach. My head started spinning. “Wait… she hasn’t been at your house or mine?”
Tessa was quiet for a moment. “No. I just wanted to let you know before anyone panicked.”
I slammed my phone down, my heart hammering. Jordan hadn’t told me where she’d been. My safe, normal routine had been shattered without warning. I ran to check her room—her bed made, her bag gone. Nothing out of place, except that gnawing feeling of dread.
Where had she been hiding all this time? And why hadn’t she told me?


