เข้าสู่ระบบEthan remained motionless, the phone still pressed against his ear long after the line had gone dead. For a moment, he wondered if exhaustion had finally begun to play tricks on him. He checked the screen, confirming the call had lasted eleven seconds before the number disappeared into the growing list of unknown callers. He tried calling it back immediately, only to hear, "The number you have dialed is unavailable." He tried again, but the same automated voice answered.
Daniel had been watching from across the kitchen. "Who was it?" Ethan lowered the phone slowly. "I don't know." "Didn't sound like a reporter." "It wasn't." Daniel leaned forward, searching his friend's face. "What did they say?" Ethan hesitated, almost embarrassed by how impossible it sounded. "A little girl." Daniel frowned. "Lily?" "I think so." "You think?" "I only heard one word." "What word?" Ethan looked down at the phone resting in his hand. "'Daddy.'" The room fell quiet. Daniel let out a slow breath before reaching for the newspaper still lying on the table. He folded it in half and pushed it aside, as though removing the headline might somehow make the morning feel less unbearable. "Maybe someone's playing with you. It's already the biggest story in the city. It wouldn't be difficult for someone to find your number." Ethan nodded, but something didn't sit right. "It wasn't just the voice." "What do you mean?" "There was... fear." Daniel gave him a skeptical look. "You heard all that from one word?" "I heard breathing before she spoke." He replayed those few seconds in his mind. The child hadn't sounded rehearsed. She had sounded frightened, as if she was trying very hard not to be heard by someone standing nearby. Daniel stood and began pacing the length of the apartment. "If that's really Lily, then someone let her make that call." "Or she stole someone's phone." "Either way, she's alive." Those words settled over Ethan more heavily than he expected. Alive. Until now, he hadn't realized how quickly his mind had begun imagining the worst. Before either of them could speak again, another knock sounded at the apartment door. This one was louder than before, making Daniel instinctively glance toward the window. "They've found your floor?" "I don't think so." Ethan approached the door without opening it. "Who is it?" A calm voice answered from the hallway. "Detective Marcus Hale." Ethan and Daniel exchanged a look. Neither had expected the police to arrive this quickly. Ethan unlocked the door, revealing the detective standing alone with a leather folder tucked beneath one arm. He looked tired rather than intimidating, as though he'd spent the night chasing answers that refused to be found. "Mr. Cole," Marcus said. "May I come in?" Ethan stepped aside. "I wish I had better reasons for visiting." Daniel disappeared into the kitchen and returned with a fresh cup of coffee, which Marcus accepted with a grateful nod. "I've been to your office, your parents' house, and now here," he said. "You're becoming difficult to find." "I wasn't hiding." "I know." Marcus took a sip before opening the folder. "I've spent the last twelve hours interviewing everyone who attended the wedding. Your family. Amelia's family. The minister. The choir. Security staff. Even the florist." "And?" "And no one recognizes the little girl." Ethan felt a flicker of relief that vanished almost immediately. Marcus continued, "No one remembers seeing her enter the church. No one remembers seeing her leave." Daniel frowned. "That's impossible." "I agree." Marcus slid a photograph across the table. It showed the cathedral entrance moments before the ceremony began, with guests filling the steps, smiling for pictures. "Do you notice anything unusual?" the detective asked. Ethan studied the image. At first, he saw nothing. Then his eyes settled on a woman standing near one of the stone pillars. She wore a cream-colored hat pulled low over her face, and something about her posture felt deliberate. She wasn't looking at the bride or the arriving guests; she was looking toward the church doors. "I've seen her before," Ethan murmured. Marcus looked up. "Where?" Ethan searched his memory, but the image refused to sharpen. "I... don't know." He tapped the corner of the photograph. "I just have this feeling." Marcus quietly retrieved another photograph from the folder. It had been taken inside the cathedral only minutes before Amelia walked down the aisle. The same woman appeared again from a different angle, wearing the same hat and holding the same expressionless posture. "Two photographs," Marcus said. "Taken twenty-three minutes apart." He paused before adding, "And according to every guest I've interviewed... no one remembers speaking to her."Was it really Lily? If so, how did she get Ethan's number? If not, who wants Ethan to believe she's still out there? Those are the kinds of hooks that keep readers turning the page without relying on constant shock.
The evidence room at Central Precinct had never been designed for discoveries of this staggering scale. By the time the boxes from Mercer Lane arrived, every available surface had been cleared. Officers moved carefully through narrow aisles stacked high with sealed cardboard cartons. The atmosphere within the station was unusually subdued. Even the younger detectives, who normally joked through long evening shifts, seemed to understand they had stumbled into something far beyond an ordinary criminal investigation. Marcus stood before a massive whiteboard covered with photographs and documents from the house. He had resisted the temptation to open every single file immediately. Pure curiosity solved very few complex cases; rigid discipline did.Lena entered carrying a slim plastic evidence bag with a quiet sense of urgency. "The forensic lab finished examining the cassette tape we recovered."Marcus turned away from the whiteboard, his eyes narrowing slightly. "So it's actually playab
Marcus stood motionless, letting his eyes travel across the rows of boxes. The room was larger than it had first appeared, stretching far beyond the reach of the fading afternoon light. Dust floated lazily through the air, yet the shelves themselves were remarkably clean, as though someone had wiped them down not long ago. "This isn't random," he said quietly.Ethan looked from one shelf to another, his brow furrowed. "You think every box belongs to someone?"Marcus nodded. "I think every box belongs to a person."Lena's heavy footsteps echoed up the staircase as she entered the room with two forensic officers close behind. She stopped dead beside Marcus, her expression changing the moment she saw the endless grid of shelves. "I've never seen anything like this." Neither had he.The officers immediately began photographing the scene before touching a single item. Marcus watched one of them reach for a thick folder marked COLE, ETHAN. "Careful," he warned. "Document every single page b
For several seconds, none of them moved. The final piano note lingered in the damp air before dissolving into absolute silence. Marcus instinctively raised a hand, signaling Ethan and Amelia to stay behind him. The sound had been too clear to dismiss as an overactive imagination, yet the house stood as completely still as every other abandoned building on Mercer Lane.Marcus knocked firmly on the weathered wood. No answer. He waited, listening intently, but heard nothing except the wind stirring overgrown branches that scraped softly against an upstairs window. "I'm going in," he said quietly.The front door resisted at first, then gave way with a tired, metallic groan. A stale smell drifted out, carrying the heavy scent of dust, damp wood, and something older that had long since faded into the plaster. Marcus's flashlight swept across the dark entrance hall, illuminating a narrow staircase that climbed to the second floor. To the left sat a drawing room covered in white sheets, each
Marcus stood alone in the evidence room long after everyone else had gone home for the night. The notebook recovered from the warehouse lay open beneath the stark glow of a desk lamp. It still bothered him that it contained nothing except dates. Whoever had compiled it had fully expected those numbers to speak for themselves. He compared them once more with the timeline on the evidence board: September 14. June 22. March 3. Yesterday. There was no obvious chronological pattern. Yet every single date corresponded to a moment when someone connected to this case had made a critical, life-altering decision. He closed the leather cover with a heavy thud. This wasn't a diary; it was a ledger of turning points. Someone had been documenting their choices in real time.His office phone rang, breaking the silence. "Hale.""I've got something you need to see," Officer Brooks said.Marcus reached for a pen. "I'm listening.""We finally traced the property records for Whitmore Storage. The wareho
Marcus barely slept that night. The photograph left on his windshield sat on his desk at the precinct, sealed inside a plastic evidence sleeve. He had looked at it well enough to know every detail by heart, the angle, the shadows, even the faint reflection of Amelia in the car window. Whoever had taken it had not been careless. They had been close enough to observe them without attracting notice, then bold enough to leave proof of their presence.The next morning, he returned to Hawthorne Street with a warrant and a small forensic team.The chain on the warehouse door was removed carefully, photographed before anyone touched the metal. As the heavy doors groaned open, a stale, metallic smell drifted out into the damp morning air. The building had been abandoned for years, yet it wasn't empty.A single folding chair stood near the center of the concrete floor. Beside it was a small folding table holding a coffee cup, a notebook, and a pair of binoculars.Marcus crouched beside the cup,
By mid-afternoon, the rain had eased into a fine mist that clung to the pavement and softened the harsh edges of the city. Hawthorne Street was far quieter than Marcus remembered. Small repair shops sat squeezed between aging brick buildings, their faded signs hinting at local businesses that had survived more out of stubborn habit than actual profit.The alley marked on the anonymous map was easy enough to find. Narrow and utterly unremarkable, it was exactly the sort of place most people would walk past without a second glance. Amelia stood beside Marcus, her hands buried deep in the pockets of her winter coat. "This is where she disappeared?" Marcus nodded, his eyes scanning the bricks. "According to the traffic cameras." She looked from one end of the alley to the other, her brow furrowed. "There has to be another way out." "So I thought."They walked its length slowly, their footsteps echoing against the damp walls. A rusted fire escape zigzagged down the back of one building,







