I was home with my newborn when the doorbell rang, right in the middle of pumping. I never answer it, so I just kept going. Five minutes later, I heard a stranger talking to my husband downstairs.
Then he stormed up the stairs, grabbed the baby, and said, “Sorry, I didn’t…”
He didn’t finish the sentence. He didn’t look at me. Just cradled our daughter to his chest and walked out of the room like I wasn’t even there.
At first, I thought he was mad about something. Maybe the dishes. Maybe I’d forgotten to take the dog out.
My brain was foggy from hormones and sleep deprivation and everything else that comes with being five weeks postpartum. I pulled my tank top down, yanked out the flanges, and stood there listening. Then I realized something.
I hadn’t heard the baby cry. Normally, if someone picks her up—even my husband—she squeals a little. Or makes that high-pitched cooing noise she does when she’s annoyed.
But nothing. I grabbed my robe and padded down the stairs barefoot. The front door was wide open.
He and the baby were gone. No car keys on the hook. No stroller by the door.
Just silence and that weird smell of late-summer humidity and our neighbor’s jasmine vines. I called his name. Once.
Twice. Nothing. I tried his phone, and it rang until voicemail.
I left a message saying, “Hey… what’s going on?” in a fake-calm voice, hoping it wasn’t as weird as it felt. Twenty minutes later, still no word. I called again.
No answer. That’s when I noticed the envelope on the kitchen counter. Just a plain white envelope with my name on it.
Inside was a handwritten note, in his half-cursive, all-caps way of writing:
“I’m taking her. I’ll explain soon. Please don’t panic.”
My knees buckled.
I called 911. The operator asked if there was a custody issue, and I said no. I said we were married.
Happily, I thought. They sent a patrol car anyway. When the officer arrived, I could barely keep my voice steady.
He asked me if there had been any signs of emotional distress, if my husband had ever shown signs of depression or paranoia. I said no. The last thing we argued about was what color to paint the hallway.
We hadn’t even decided yet. The officer filed a missing persons report and said they’d put out a BOLO—“Be On the Lookout”—for the car. Then he left, and I was alone again.
I called my sister Adina. She lives forty minutes away, but she showed up in twenty-seven. Still wearing her nurse scrubs, smelling like antiseptic and coffee.
She held me while I cried, while I kept saying the same thing over and over: “He wouldn’t do this. He wouldn’t just take her.”
But he had. And by nightfall, he still hadn’t called.
Three days passed. I barely slept. Barely ate.
My milk dried up. The police traced his debit card to a gas station off the interstate, then nothing. No credit activity, no phone pings.
On day four, I sat on the floor of the nursery, still hoping I’d wake up from some nightmare, when the doorbell rang again. It was his cousin. Carmen.
The one from his mom’s side who never liked me. She handed me a piece of paper, her hands shaking. “He told me to give you this if he didn’t come back by now.”
It was a letter.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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