When I became a mother, I promised myself I’d always nurture my daughter’s imagination. I wanted her to draw, sing, and dream without limits — the way I once did before life taught me how easily dreams can crumble. That’s why, when she came running into the kitchen one sunny Saturday morning with a handful of crayons and a grin wide enough to melt anyone’s heart, I didn’t think much of it.
“Mommy, look! I drew us!” she said, holding up a piece of paper still warm from her tiny, eager hands. I was halfway through scrambling eggs when I turned to see it — a charmingly uneven family portrait in bold strokes of purple, yellow, and green.
There we were: me with my long hair, my husband with his short brown hair and big smile, and our daughter in her favorite pink dress. The sun beamed down from the corner, flowers dotted the grass, and in her typical sweet touch, she’d added hearts above our heads. But then I saw it — a fourth figure.
A little boy. He was standing beside her, holding her hand. His hair was dark, his shirt blue.
And though her other drawings were often messy and abstract, this one was surprisingly careful. He wasn’t just a random stick figure. He was… someone.
I smiled, trying to play it cool. “Who’s this, sweetheart?”
She looked at me with those bright brown eyes — the same as her father’s — and said cheerfully, “That’s my brother!”
My hand froze midair. “Your brother?” I repeated, trying to keep my voice light.
“You mean your cousin?”
She shook her head firmly. “No, Mommy. My brother.
He plays with me sometimes when you and Daddy are sleeping.”
My stomach gave a little twist — not out of fear, but confusion. “What do you mean, plays with you?”
She shrugged like it was the simplest thing in the world. “He comes to my room and we play house.
He’s nice.”
I didn’t know whether to laugh or worry. Kids at that age have imaginary friends all the time, and her description seemed harmless. So I chuckled, kissed her forehead, and said, “Well, that’s a lovely drawing.
Let’s put it on the fridge.”
But something about the boy’s face stuck in my mind — the careful way she’d drawn it, the clear shape of his features. I couldn’t help noticing that he looked… familiar. At first, I brushed it off as a coincidence.
But that week, little things started to bother me. My husband, David, had been acting strange lately — distant, distracted. He’d always been hands-on with our daughter, reading bedtime stories and building Lego castles with her on weekends.
But over the past month, he’d seemed restless. He was staying late at work more often, claiming meetings or unexpected calls. When I’d ask what was wrong, he’d smile that easy, charming smile and say, “Just stress from work, honey.
Nothing to worry about.”
Still, I noticed his phone lighting up late at night. Sometimes he’d step into the hallway to answer. Once, I caught a glimpse of a name I didn’t recognize — “Anna” — before he turned the screen away.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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