A Baby on Her Porch Wore Her Missing Daughter’s Jacket-eirian

Jennifer vanished on a Thursday morning that had no right to become the worst day of my life.

There was no storm warning.

No broken window.

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No scream from the street.

There was only my daughter in the kitchen doorway, sixteen years old, backpack hanging off one shoulder, hair still damp from the shower and smelling faintly of strawberry shampoo.

She was annoyed because I asked her to text me when she arrived.

“Mom,” she said, dragging the word out the way teenagers do when love feels like surveillance. “I know.”

I remember smiling.

That is the detail that still punishes me.

I smiled because I thought I would see her again that afternoon.

She left with her denim jacket thrown over one arm, the same faded blue jacket she wore almost every day that year.

It had a tear near the left pocket because she had caught it on the fence behind the house one summer night.

It had a tiny crooked star drawn in black marker inside the collar because Jennifer believed everything she owned should have proof that it belonged to her.

By dinner, she had not come home.

By midnight, I had called every friend whose number I had.

By sunrise, the police had the first report.

The missing-person poster came later that day.

Jennifer Anne was sixteen, five feet four, brown hair, green eyes, last seen wearing jeans, white sneakers, and a blue denim jacket.

I read those words so many times they stopped sounding like language.

They became an accusation.

The first week was all movement.

Police cars in front of the house.

Neighbors walking ditches and tree lines.

Radio announcements.

Social media posts shared by people who had never spoken to me before and would never speak to me again.

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