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Chapter 2

Penulis: Cough Syrup
I didn't know how I made it home. I only remembered that when Chester drove over to pick me up, my hands wouldn't stop shaking. I had crushed the cake box in my grip. Cream leaked out, sticky and smeared all over my hands.

"You're fine, Sophie. Once we're home, get some sleep, and you'll feel better," he said, steering with one hand and holding mine with the other.

His palm was warm, yet it sent a chill through me. Everything felt wrong, deeply wrong, but I couldn't explain why. My mind was foggy, my thoughts tangled, and I couldn't think straight.

The car rolled into the familiar underground garage and stopped in the parking space we had used for five years. The elevator went up, the numbers increasing along with the rate of my pounding heartbeat.

Chester must've picked Dorothy up without telling me. This had to be a prank. Everything was fine. Dorothy had to be at home.

The elevator chimed, and we arrived on the 12th floor. I unlocked our door and didn't even bother changing my shoes. I ran down the hallway like I had lost my mind, straight for the door at the end.

It should've led to Dorothy's room—pink wallpaper, a small bed piled with stuffed toys, and a desk full of crayon drawings. Chester followed behind me, his tone helpless. "Sophie, that's just the study."

I shoved the door open, and I gasped. There was no pink, no stuffed toys, nor crayon drawings. Instead, what met my eyes were dark-gray bookshelves, a massive rosewood desk, and walls filled with foreign-language books I couldn't even read.

The air held none of that childlike sweetness, just the old smell of paper and a faint trace of sandalwood.

"No, this can't be… This isn't real…"

I dropped to my knees, my hands clawing frantically at the expensive carpet. Just yesterday, Dorothy had been on this carpet, playing with her puzzle. A blue piece of sky had gone missing, and she had cried for ages looking for it.

Now, there was nothing. Shaking, I pulled out my phone and opened my photo gallery.

There were more than 3,000 photos saved, all of which were records of Dorothy growing up—her first time rolling over, her first steps, her first time calling me Mommy, and her first trip to the amusement park…

I tapped on the folder named "My Baby". It was empty, with zero items. Still dubious, I opened Facebook, only to find every post where I had shown Dorothy off, even on nights I worked past midnight, was gone.

What remained were only photos of Chester and me or shots of scenery. Even the captions had changed. What used to say, "Dottie learned how to ride a bike today!" now read, "What a nice day for a stroll in the park."

I broke down screaming. The phone flew from my hand and slammed into the wall, shattering the screen.

"Sophie!"

An anxious voice came from the doorway. I turned and saw my and Chester's parents. I scrambled over on my hands and knees and clutched Mom's leg.

"Mom, tell me the truth! I have a daughter, don't I? Dottie—just last week, you knitted her a sweater! It's red, with a bunny on it!"

Mom's eyes were rimmed red. She crouched down, stroked my hair with her trembling hand, and cried.

"Sophie, please stop… That sweater… You forced me to knit it for a doll. After your miscarriage five years ago, your mental state was never stable. The doctors said you developed delusions. We were afraid of upsetting you, so we went along with it this whole time…"

I froze. Even Mom was lying to me.

"A miscarriage?" I murmured. "That's impossible. I clearly had a C-section…"

I yanked up my shirt and pointed at my smooth, pale belly. "How do you explain this, then? I used to have a scar here."

This time, my mother-in-law spoke. She sighed, her eyes full of pity.

"Sophie, you never carried the pregnancy to term. It was an early miscarriage. These past few years, you've been doing unnecessary scar-removal treatments and skin care nonstop because you thought you had a C-section. Have you really forgotten?"

Everyone was looking at me, some with sympathy, some with pity, and some with helpless resignation. They formed a circle around me, trapping me in the center.

Had I truly lost my mind all this time?

The room began to spin. Darkness rushed in, and I lost consciousness completely.
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  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 9

    The press conference turned into chaos.Anna delivered a slap across Chester's face so hard that the corner of his lips bled. "You're a disgusting piece of shit! I'm pulling the investment! You'd better pay me back every single penny you've taken from me!"She was no hopeless romantic. In front of the media, she canceled the engagement and reported him for fraud. The police entered.Cold handcuffs clicked around Chester's wrists, and finally, he broke. The polished, charming Chester from before was gone. He knelt before me, clawing at the hem of my dress."I'm sorry, Sophie! I was wrong! I lost my mind, but only because I did it for our future! Tell the police this is just a domestic dispute, a misunderstanding! I mean, Dottie is still alive, isn't she? I'm not going to prison—I can't!"I hugged Dorothy tighter and took a step back, keeping him at arm's length. "This isn't just a domestic dispute, Chester. This is child abduction and trafficking. You'll spend the rest of your life

  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 8

    At 10:00 am, the press conference commenced in the top-floor ballroom of Grant Group.Chester stood under the spotlight in a custom white suit. He held the hand of Anna Ziegler, the heiress of the Ziegler family. He looked like a prince, gentle, polished, and deeply in love."Thank you all for witnessing Anna and me get engaged," he said. "And thank you, Mr. Ziegler, for investing ten billion dollars into Grant Group."His voice carried through the microphone, filling the ballroom and streaming live into homes across the country."Before I met Anna, I went through a painful marriage," he continued. "My ex-wife struggled with mental illness and lived trapped in her own delusions… It's sad, but I did everything I could."A wave of sympathy swept through the crowd. Everyone murmured about how devoted he had been.A cold, clear voice cut through the chatter. "Really? So, you did everything you could to sell your daughter on the black market, huh?"The doors swung open, and I walked

  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 7

    Because Christian was an illegitimate child, he was constantly suppressed when he was first brought back into the Grant family. Chester even once set him up in a staged car accident, where Christian nearly died.As for how Chester eventually forced his way into Grant Group, I didn't know the details. All I knew was that once he took over, the entire company went through a massive purge. Even Christian was kicked out.One day, Christian locked Chester inside an abandoned warehouse. It was the very place where, years earlier, after the car crash, Chester had planned to dump his body.Chester was deprived of food and water for three days. When he was barely hanging on, Christian threw him a knife. "Either kill yourself or beg me."Chester knelt and begged, but Christian stepped on his head, smiling casually, and pressed the knife against his neck. "I was just messing with you, bro. How could I ever let you walk out of here alive?"If I hadn't noticed Chester was missing and rushed th

  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 6

    Based on what Chester said on the phone, I tracked down a place called St. Mary's Welfare Home. It wasn't in the suburbs at all, more like deep in the mountains, more than 60 miles west.I stealthily slipped out of the apartment. Outside, rain poured hard, with thunder rolling overhead. I drove the old Honda Fit we used for grocery runs, tearing along the muddy mountain roads.About two hours later, the car died halfway up the mountain. I abandoned it and continued on foot. The rain nearly blinded me, and there were no streetlights or people. The mountain path was treacherous, every step a test from the sky.I didn't stop, though. Hatred, fear, and worry pushed me forward. At last, I saw lights glowing at the pitch-black mountaintop.Instead of calling it a welfare home, the place looked more like a prison than an orphanage. There were high walls, electric fencing, and guard dogs pacing at the gate.I didn't enter through the front like an impulsive person would. Enduring the poun

  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 5

    It felt like time had rolled back a week. Dorothy had come running to me in tears. "Mommy, my tooth fell out. It's bleeding!"I comforted her while helping stop the bleeding. The tooth was too tiny and slipped into a crack in the floor. No matter how hard we tried, we couldn't get it out.Back then, Chester had even said, "Enough with the digging. We're changing the floor anyway. Let it be a mark Dottie left in this house."I clenched the tooth in my fist. Its sharp edge cut into my palm, and blood seeped out and stained the bit of white red. Tears splattered soundlessly onto the floor.None of this had been my delusion. This was the very proof.If I hadn't given birth and Dorothy never existed, where did this baby tooth, buried beneath the floor, come from?After the crushing grief came a rage fierce enough to burn everything down. If Chester had gone to such lengths to erase every trace of Dorothy, it could only mean she was still alive.I wrapped the blood-stained tooth in la

  • The Day My Five‑Year‑Old Disappeared   Chapter 4

    Pudding yelped in pain and bolted.When Chester looked up and saw me standing at the end of the hallway, his face immediately melted into a gentle smile. "You're up. Why didn't you sleep in?"I locked my gaze on his eyes, forcing down the storm raging inside me. "Oh, I just needed to use the bathroom."To make him let his guard down, I played the obedient patient for three days straight. I took my medicine on time, never mentioned Dorothy again, and even offered to redecorate the apartment the way I liked it.I went to work as usual. Even my colleagues occasionally teased, "Finally taking it easy, huh? Don't you need to pick up your kid these days?"I simply smiled and shook my head, revealing nothing. Inside, I was forming bold guesses. I had no idea if I was being watched, so I trod carefully, keeping up the facade I had built.Chester was clearly pleased, seeing that he had relaxed his watch over me.This morning, he even left early for a company emergency. The moment the fro

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