I screenshot every message, making sure the timestamps were visible. I captured Amanda’s “We’ve got her” and my mother’s “We’ll take good care of her.” I saved the call log showing when I’d tried to reach them. I saved the voicemail from the unknown number that had come in right after the hospital call— a half-message from an automated system confirming something about an incident report.
Then social media.
Amanda’s page was a highlight reel: smiling faces, bright sunlight, location tags so precise they might as well have been coordinates. She’d posted pictures of the kids with ice cream, pictures of my parents on a bench laughing. Logan had posted a story— a blurry clip of a ride, loud with joy. Ella’s face appeared in a photo with blue syrup on her chin.
Lucy wasn’t in any of them.
The absence wasn’t subtle. It was a hole shaped exactly like my daughter.
I saved everything. Downloaded. Archived. Labeled.
Proof has a way of settling your stomach when nothing else will.