I saw a homeless man outside the grocery store wearing MY MISSING DAUGHTER'S HAND-KNIT RED SWEATER
I saw a homeless man outside the grocery store wearing MY MISSING DAUGHTER'S HAND-KNIT RED SWEATER HIS 4-WORD CONFESSION made me drop my groceries in shock. It has been three years, two months, and fourteen days since my daughter Lily disappeared. She was 18 when she left. I raised her alone after her father walked out. It was always just the two of us — Sunday church, late-night talks in the kitchen, her head on my shoulder while we watched old movies. Lily was my whole world. And yes, I was strict. I believed rules would keep her safe. But we loved each other fiercely. The last night I saw her, we argued about her future — the kind of argument where both people think they’re protecting something important. She cried. I cried. Neither of us said sorry. The next morning she was gone. For three years I searched. Flyers, hospitals, shelters — anything. The police eventually labeled her a runaway. But mothers don’t stop looking. The last thing Lily wore when she left was ...