Twenty years had passed, but not a single day went by without Evelyn thinking about her daughter.

Some memories fade with time, but others remain as sharp as the day they happened. For Evelyn, the memory of eight-year-old Tara laughing in the garden beneath their apartment in Cairo was one she carried everywhere.
Back then, her husband, Daniel, had just begun building his career as a journalist. When he was offered a position with an American publication in Egypt, it felt like a dream opportunity. The couple packed their belongings and moved overseas, excited to begin a new chapter.
At first, everything felt unfamiliar. The language, the streets, and the sounds of Cairo were unlike anything they had known in Ohio. But little by little, they adjusted.
They rented a comfortable apartment on the second floor of a quiet building. Below it was a spacious garden filled with flowers and trees. Tara loved spending hours there. She would draw pictures, chase butterflies, and greet neighbors with a smile.
Eventually, Cairo felt like home.
Daniel spent long hours writing articles, while Evelyn found work of her own. Life settled into a peaceful rhythm.
Then everything changed.
One ordinary morning, Evelyn kissed Tara on the forehead before heading to work. Daniel stayed home that day, saying he needed to finish an article and would keep an eye on their daughter.
Nothing seemed unusual.
But when Evelyn returned that evening, she immediately noticed police vehicles parked outside.
Her heart sank.
Daniel rushed toward her, pale and shaken.
โTara went down to play in the garden,โ he said. โWhen I checked on her, she was gone.โ
At first, Evelyn thought there had been some misunderstanding.
But as the hours turned into days, reality became impossible to deny.
Everyone searched.
Police officers.
Neighbors.
Friends.
Even strangers joined in.
But despite all the efforts, no answers came.
Weeks became months.
Months became a year.
Eventually, with broken hearts, Evelyn and Daniel returned to Ohio.
Nothing was ever the same.
Their marriage slowly changed under the weight of grief. Though they remained together, silence often filled the spaces where laughter once lived.
Photographs of Tara decorated every room.
Birthdays became painful reminders.
Christmases felt incomplete.
People told Evelyn that time would heal.
But time didn’t erase questions.
It only taught her how to carry them.
Twenty years passed.
Tara would have been twenty-eight years old.
Sometimes Evelyn imagined what her daughter might look like now. She wondered whether she would have children of her own. Whether she loved music. Whether she had inherited Danielโs sense of humor.
Then one evening, after returning home from work, Evelyn picked up the mail.
Bills.
Advertisements.
And one postcard.
She almost ignored it.
But something about it caught her attention.
The front showed a beautiful view of Cairo.
Her breath stopped.
There was an Egyptian stamp.
Her hands began to tremble.
Slowly, she turned it over.
There was no signature.
No explanation.
Only an address.
And surprisingly, it wasn’t overseas.
It was less than an hour away.
Evelyn stared at it for several seconds.
Her mind raced.
Questions filled her thoughts.
Could this be a mistake?
Was someone playing a cruel joke?
Or was it something else entirely?
Without thinking, she grabbed her coat and keys.
Night had already fallen, but she couldn’t wait until morning.
Her heart pounded throughout the drive.
Every red light felt endless.
Finally, she arrived at the address.
It led to a row of rental garages.
Everything around her was quiet.
She checked the postcard again.
The unit number matched.
Her breathing became uneven.
Slowly, she walked toward the garage.
The metal door stood before her.
Her hands shook as she reached for the handle.
Part of her wanted to turn around.
Another part couldn’t stop.
She lifted the door.
And froze.
Inside were boxes.
Dozens of them.
Carefully arranged.
Photo albums.
Drawings.
Old toys.
Books she recognized.
And sitting on a table in the center of the room was a framed picture.
It was a photograph of Tara.
Not at eight years old.
Not the picture Evelyn had carried for two decades.
This photograph showed a grown woman.
Beside it rested a letter.
Evelyn’s knees weakened.