I got home from work at exactly 6:17 p.m., fifteen minutes later than usual, and something felt wrong the second I stepped inside. The house was too quiet. No cartoons playing in the background. No tiny footsteps racing down the hallway. No dinner smells drifting from the kitchen. Just a heavy, unnatural silence pressing against my chest. I called out for the girls, trying to sound calm, but even my own voice echoed back at me like I didn’t belong there. That’s when I saw them — my twin daughters sitting stiffly on the couch, shoes still on, backpacks untouched.
Their knees were tucked to their chests like they were bracing for a storm. When I asked where their mom was, they exchanged a look no child should ever have to give. “She took her suitcase,” Emma said quietly. Then Lily added the words that knocked the air out of me: “She said goodbye forever.” I felt my pulse in my ears. I rushed to the bedroom and knew instantly it wasn’t a misunderstanding. Her side of the closet was empty. The bathroom shelves cleared. Even the framed family photo from last summer was gone.
On the kitchen counter, beside my untouched coffee mug from that morning, was a folded piece of paper. My hands trembled as I opened it. “I think you deserve a new beginning with the girls. Don’t blame yourself. If you want answers… better ask your mom.” I read it again. And again. My mom? What did that even mean? My mother and Jyll were never close, but nothing that would explain this. Nothing that would justify disappearing without a conversation, without a fight, without a warning.
I didn’t waste another second. I grabbed the girls’ jackets, buckled them into the car, and drove straight across town. My heart pounded so hard it hurt. Every possible explanation ran through my mind, each worse than the last. By the time I reached my mother’s house, I was shaking. She answered the door in her robe, looking irritated, like I had interrupted her evening routine. That expression alone made something inside me snap.
Before she could speak, I stepped forward and demanded, “Mom… what the hell did you do to Jyll?” The look that crossed her face wasn’t confusion. It wasn’t shock. It was something far colder — something that told me she knew exactly why I was standing there. And in that moment, I realized my family hadn’t just fallen apart. It had been pulled apart — deliberately.