I never thought I’d be the kind of mother who follows her child.
I always pictured myself as the steady one — the rides, the lunches, the reminders, the constant invisible stitching that holds a kid’s life together. I thought that was enough.
Until a random phone call turned my stomach inside out.
“Hi, this is Mrs. Carter,” the voice said. “Emily’s homeroom teacher. I wanted to check in because Emily hasn’t been in class all week.”
For a second, I genuinely thought she’d dialed the wrong number.
“That can’t be right,” I said, pushing back from my desk so fast my chair scraped the floor. “She leaves the house every morning. I watch her walk out the door.”
There was a pause. The kind of pause that isn’t silence — it’s gravity.
“No,” Mrs. Carter said carefully. “She hasn’t been in any of her classes since Monday.”
I thanked her, because that’s what adults do when their brains are sprinting in circles, and then I hung up and sat there staring at nothing.
My daughter had been putting on her backpack, walking out the door, getting on the bus… and disappearing.
When Emily came home that afternoon, I waited at the kitchen counter like a trap disguised as a normal question.
“How was school, Em?”
She didn’t even blink. “The usual. A ton of math homework. History is so boring.”
“Anything else? Friends? Gym?”
Her shoulders went tight.
Then the attitude arrived like a shield. “What is this? The Spanish Inquisition?”
And she stomped off to her room, hoodie swallowed around her face like it could hide her from me.
That’s when I knew a direct confrontation wouldn’t get me the truth. It would only teach her how to lie better.