“Yeah, Mom.” He grabbed his jacket and leaned over to kiss my cheek. “See you tonight.”

Then the door closed behind him.

I stood at the window and watched him walk down the street the way I always did. It was such a normal moment that I never imagined it would become the last ordinary memory I had of him.

That night, Ethan didn’t come home.

At first, I wasn’t worried. Ethan sometimes stayed after school to play guitar with friends or wandered over to the park nearby. He usually texted when he did that, but I told myself maybe his phone battery had died.

I kept repeating that excuse while I cooked dinner, while I ate alone, and while I washed the dishes and left his plate warming in the oven.

But when darkness fell and his room was still empty, something inside me twisted with fear.

I called his phone.

Straight to voicemail.

By ten that night, I was driving through the neighborhood looking for him.

By midnight, I was sitting inside a police station reporting him missing.

The officer on duty asked routine questions while writing in a notebook.

“Sometimes teenagers leave for a few days,” he said calmly. “Arguments with parents, wanting space. It happens.”

“Ethan isn’t like that.”