The first thing I noticed was the birthmark — the tiny crescent moon on her cheek. I used to kiss it every night when she was two years old. It was the same one on the little girl her mother took and disappeared with nearly ten years ago.
“License and registration,” she said, her voice crisp and controlled, the practiced calm of a trained officer. I handed over the documents with shaking hands, trying to steady myself. The name on them, Robert McAllister, meant nothing to her. Amy made sure she would never hear it again.
But the moment I saw her, I knew.
She stood with her weight tilted slightly to her left side — the same way she did as a toddler learning to balance on unsteady legs. A faint scar sat above her eyebrow, the one she got when she fell from her tricycle in our driveway. She used to cry until I lifted her into my arms and held her close.
She still had the same nervous habit too: tucking her hair behind her ear when she was concentrating. It was such a small thing, but parents store those details deep inside, as naturally as breathing. I had convinced myself I’d never see any of them again.
And now she was here.
A police officer. Confident. Composed. Standing at my window, looking at me like any other driver she’d pulled over. To her, I was a stranger — just a name, a license, a routine traffic stop.
But to me?
She was still the little girl I once carried to bed, whispering goodnight as I kissed that crescent-shaped birthmark on her cheek. The child I lost without warning. The child I never stopped missing.
And now she was inches away, close enough to touch, yet impossibly out of reach.
