Footsteps crossed the hallway slowly, cautiously, as if the person entering the house did not want to make noise.
My chest tightened.

Those steps were too light to be an adult’s.
They were Lily’s.
Her backpack brushed softly against the wall as she walked toward her room.
The door creaked open.
I held my breath so hard it felt like my lungs might collapse.
For a few seconds, nothing happened.
Then the mattress dipped slightly above me.
She had sat on the bed.
I could hear her breathing.
Uneven.
Anxious.
Not the relaxed breathing of someone skipping school for fun.
A moment later, I heard something else.
Another pair of footsteps.
Heavier.
Slower.
My heart slammed against my ribs.
Someone else was inside the house.
Mrs. Greene’s words echoed in my mind.
Sometimes she’s not alone.
The door closed quietly.
A male voice spoke.
Soft.
Too soft.
“Did your mom leave already?”
My entire body froze.
Lily answered in a whisper.

“Yes. She always leaves by eight.”
The man exhaled slowly.
Relief.
“Good,” he said.
The word crawled down my spine like ice.
The mattress shifted again.
He had sat beside her.
For a terrifying moment, my mind imagined the worst possibilities a parent can imagine.
My fists clenched in the darkness beneath the bed.
But then Lily spoke again.
And her voice sounded… different.
Not nervous.
Not excited.
Exhausted.
“I didn’t want to skip school again,” she murmured.
My heart stopped.
The man replied quickly.
“It’s just until things calm down, okay?”
Silence filled the room.
I could hear Lily’s fingers nervously tapping the edge of the bed.
Then she asked a question that made my stomach twist.
“Do you think they’re going to find him?”
The man didn’t answer immediately.
When he did, his voice had lost its softness.
“No,” he said firmly.
“He disappeared. Nobody knows where he went.”
My blood ran cold.
Find who?
Disappear?
What were they talking about?
Lily spoke again.
“But they keep asking questions at school.”
Her voice trembled slightly now.
“They asked about the last day he was there.”
The man shifted again on the mattress.
“You didn’t say anything, right?”
A long pause.
Too long.
My daughter finally whispered,
“No.”
The man sighed with relief.
“Good girl.”
Those two words made my stomach turn.
Good girl.
Not something a teacher says.
Not something a family friend says.
Something about the tone felt wrong.
Too familiar.
Too controlling.
I slowly angled my head, trying to see through the thin strip of light under the bedspread.
All I could see were shoes.
Lily’s white sneakers.
And another pair.
Men’s shoes.

Dark leather.
Worn at the edges.
Not someone young.
Not a teenager.
An adult.
My pulse pounded so loudly I was sure they would hear it.
Then Lily said something that shattered every assumption I had made.
“I don’t like lying to Mom.”
The man leaned closer.
His shoes shifted inches from my face.
“You’re protecting her,” he said calmly.
“Remember that.”
Protecting me?
From what?
The mattress creaked again.
Then Lily whispered,
“I still see it when I close my eyes.”
The man spoke more quietly now.
“Don’t think about it.”
“I can’t help it.”
Her voice cracked.
“I keep seeing him fall.”
My heart slammed violently against my ribs.
Fall?
Fall where?
The man lowered his voice even further.
“It was an accident.”
Accident.
The word hung in the air like a shadow.
Lily sniffed softly.
“Accidents don’t make people disappear.”
The man didn’t respond.
For several seconds, the room was silent except for Lily’s uneven breathing.
Then she asked the question that made my entire body go cold.
“What if they check the security cameras?”
My pulse stopped.
The man answered immediately.
“They won’t.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I made sure they can’t.”
A chill spread through my chest.
The man stood up suddenly.
His shoes moved toward the desk.
Papers rustled.
A drawer opened.
When he spoke again, his voice was harder.
“Listen to me carefully, Lily.”
The way he said her name made my skin crawl.
“You did nothing wrong.”
Another pause.
“But if anyone finds out we were together that day…”
He didn’t finish the sentence.
He didn’t need to.
My daughter whispered,
“They’ll blame you.”
The man laughed softly.
“No.”
“They’ll blame you.”
Every drop of blood in my body turned to ice.
My daughter began to cry quietly.
“I didn’t mean for it to happen.”
The man walked back toward the bed.
His shoes stopped just inches from my face again.
“You didn’t push him,” he said calmly.
“You just told him to step back.”
My mind spun.
Push who?
Step back where?
The man lowered his voice.
“And he slipped.”
The room felt suddenly smaller.
He slipped.
Lily whispered,
“He hit the railing.”
My breath caught in my throat.
The man answered quickly.
“And then he fell.”
My heart pounded so violently I thought I might faint.
Because in that moment, a terrible realization formed in my mind.
Someone had fallen.
Someone had disappeared.
And somehow my thirteen-year-old daughter was caught in the middle of it.
Lily wiped her eyes.
“I just wanted him to stop following me.”
The man froze.
For the first time, his voice sounded uncertain.
“Following you?”
“Yes,” Lily whispered.
“He kept coming closer.”
My chest tightened.
The man said slowly,
“You never told me that part.”
“I was scared.”
Another silence filled the room.
And suddenly the story in my mind began to shift.
Maybe this wasn’t what I feared.
Maybe something else had happened entirely.
Then the man said something that made my blood run even colder.
“Lily… did anyone else see what happened on the roof that day?”
The roof.
My hands trembled beneath the bed.

Lily’s voice was barely audible.
“I don’t know.”
The man inhaled sharply.
Because if someone else had seen…
Then everything they were hiding was about to come crashing down.
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