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Part 1
My eight-year-old son passed away at school one week before Mother’s Day, and his backpack disappeared that same day. Everyone told me there was nothing more to uncover. Then a little girl came to my door holding that backpack, and what she brought inside changed everything I thought I knew about my son’s final days.
Afterward, everyone kept saying the same thing: there was nothing anyone could have done.
I tried to believe them, because believing anything else felt unbearable.
That was the part no one could explain.
His teacher, Ms. Bell, said she had no idea where it had gone. The principal, Ms. Reeves, said the school had searched everywhere. Even the officer looked uneasy when I asked about it again.
I stared at him. “My son collapsed at school, and the one thing he carried every single day disappeared. That is not the same as getting misplaced.”
No one did.
On Mother’s Day morning, I sat on the living room floor with Randy’s dinosaur blanket in my lap and his cereal bowl on the coffee table.
Every year, he made me breakfast.
This year, the bowl was empty.
At nine o’clock, the doorbell rang.
Then it rang again.
I pushed myself up, wiped my face, and opened the door, ready to turn someone away.
But a little girl stood on my porch.
Her brown hair was tangled. Her cheeks were wet. An oversized denim jacket hung loosely from her shoulders.
In her arms was Randy’s backpack.
My hand tightened around the doorframe.
“Are you Randy’s mom?” she asked.
I nodded.
She hugged the backpack closer. “You were looking for this, weren’t you?”
“Where did you get that, sweetheart?”
“Randy told me to protect it. He was my friend.”
My chest tightened. “When did he tell you that?”
“That day.”
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