I thought my daughter had vanished from a garden in Cairo twenty years ago. Then a postcard from Egypt arrived with an address near my home in Ohio. I drove there expecting another cruel clue, but what waited inside proved someone I trusted had buried the truth all along.
The postcard came from Cairo, but the address on the back was three miles from my house in Ohio.
For twenty years, I’d trained myself not to hope too loudly.
Hope had teeth, and it had already chewed through most of me.
But when I turned that postcard over and saw the Egyptian stamp, my hands started shaking so badly that the mail slid across my kitchen table.
There was no name or message.
There was just one address, and underneath it, in small block letters:
“Come alone if you still want the truth about Tara.”
***
My daughter had vanished in Cairo when she was eight years old.
Now, twenty years later, I drove to a row of rental garages with that postcard on my passenger seat and my heart pounding.
I found the number written on the card.
Forty-two.
The metal door was cold under my fingers. I pulled it open, bracing myself for the worst thing I could imagine.
Instead, I dropped to my knees.
There was no nightmare waiting in the dark. There was a woman sitting on a folding chair beside three cardboard boxes.
She had my eyes.
She looked at me like she’d spent her whole life deciding whether to hate me.
“You came fast, Cassidy,” she said.
I couldn’t breathe.
“Tara?”
Her mouth trembled, but she didn’t move.
“I needed to know if you would come.”
Twenty years earlier, my husband, Grant, moved our family to Cairo.
He was just beginning his career as a reporter then.
When he was offered a position overseas, he walked around like the world had opened its doors.
“Cass, this is it,” he said, waving the letter. “This is the kind of chance people wait years for.”
I looked across the table at Tara. She was trying to balance a spoon on her nose.
“What do you think, monkey?” I asked.
She let the spoon fall into her cereal.
“Do they have pancakes in Egypt?”
Grant laughed. “We can make pancakes anywhere.”
So we went.
We rented a small second-floor apartment with a garden below it. Tara loved that garden.
Every afternoon, she ran downstairs with her jump rope.
I watched from the balcony until she waved both arms.