For fifteen years, she was reported missing… until her brother found her underwear hidden under their grandfather’s mattress.

💔😨For fifteen years, she was reported missing… until her brother found her underwear hidden under their grandfather’s mattress.
PART 1

For fifteen years, everyone believed that Lily Carter had disappeared forever.

Some said he had fled.

Others said they had met a stranger.

Others said she was tired of her quiet little town and wanted a new life.

But his little brother, Noah, never believed it.

She was only seven years old when Lily disappeared. She was sixteen, sweet, quiet, and always smiled at him as if he were the most important person in the world.

Lily liked to sew small white flowers onto her clothes. Her mother, Margaret, had taught her. Three little flowers on her sleeves, on her bag, even on her old scarf.

Noah remembered the day he disappeared.

Rain against the windows.

His mother was crying in the kitchen.

Her father, Daniel, ran through the streets shouting Lily’s name until his voice broke.

And his grandfather, Harold, sat silently in the living room.

“He probably wanted a different life,” Harold said.

Noah hated those words.

Because Lily would never have left without saying goodbye.

The years passed.

The missing person posters are faded. The police stopped coming. The neighbors stopped asking questions. But Margaret never gave up. Lily’s room remained untouched: her books on the desk, her blue jacket behind the door, her mirror covered in dust.

Every night Margaret whispered:

My daughter will come home.

Then, fifteen years later, Harold died.

The funeral was modest. People called it “strict” and “old-fashioned.” Noah stood next to his mother and noticed something strange.

Margaret had been mourning Lily for fifteen years.

But she did not cry for her father.

After the funeral, Noah and Daniel went to Harold’s old house to empty it.

The house smelled of dust, medicine, and closed windows. Heavy curtains blocked out the light. Family photos hung across the walls. At the far end of the room was Harold’s bedroom.

Noah entered and felt a strange cold.

Daniel opened the drawers while Noah removed the sheets from the bed. Then he noticed that the mattress looked uneven.

One corner was higher than the others.

He picked it up.

First, it lives in old newspapers.

And something pink.

Noah’s heart stopped.

He threw it slowly.

It was a piece of old fabric. Faded. For sale. Almost in pieces.

But in one corner, there were three small white flowers.

Hand-sewn.

Noah fell to his knees.

– Dad…

Daniel turned around.

“What’s there?”

Noah lifted the cloth with trembling hands.

I think it was Lily’s.

Daniel fixed it. Every color was left on his face.

Then he murmured:

 

 

See the rest on the next page.

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