Part 1
For twenty years, I believed my daughter had vanished from a garden in Cairo. But one day, a postcard arrived from Egypt bearing an address just five kilometers from my home in Hamburg. I thought it was merely another cruel reminder of the past, but what I discovered there revealed that someone I had once trusted had kept the truth from me all along.
The postcard bore a Cairo postmark, yet the address on the back was close by. There was no message, no signature—only a single sentence written in small block letters: “Come alone if you still want to know the truth about Laura.”
My daughter had disappeared in Cairo when she was eight years old. Now, twenty years later, with the postcard on the passenger seat and my heart pounding, I drove toward a row of rental garages. I found unit number forty-two, lifted the cold metal door, and braced myself for the worst. Instead, I sank to my knees.
Beside three cardboard boxes, a woman sat on a folding chair. She had my eyes. She looked at me as if she had spent her entire life deciding whether or not to hate me.
“You came quickly, Kerstin,” she said. I could barely breathe. “Laura?”
Her lips trembled, but she didn’t move. “I had to know if you would come.”
Part 2
Twenty years earlier, my husband, Gregor, had moved our family to Cairo after accepting a job as a foreign correspondent for a German newspaper. We rented a small first-floor apartment with a garden below, and Laura loved playing there every afternoon. For a time, I believed we were happy.
Then came that Tuesday. I kissed Laura before leaving for work, while Gregor stayed home to write. “I’ll keep an eye on her,” he said. But when I returned that evening, police cars were parked outside our building. Gregor told me that Laura had gone downstairs to play and then simply vanished while he had looked away for a few minutes.
For weeks, everyone searched. The police, neighbors, and strangers called her name through the streets, but there was no response. No witness. No lead. No Laura. Gregor wept in public and blamed himself, yet at night he fell strangely silent. After a year, we returned to Hamburg without our daughter, and our marriage did not survive it.
Twenty years later, Gregor had built a career out of our tragedy. He wrote books and gave lectures on loss, while I built my life around waiting. Then the postcard arrived, and everything changed.
In that garage, Laura told me she had grown up believing I had abandoned her. She showed me letters she had written for every birthday from the age of nine to eighteen—letters I had never received. Then she told me the truth. Claire, a close friend of Gregor’s, had taken her from the garden. Gregor had arrived at Claire’s apartment that very night, but instead of bringing Laura home, he told her I was gone.
Claire had raised Laura under a different name. Before she died, Claire had confessed everything in a letter: Gregor wanted out of our marriage; he wanted Claire and he wanted Laura, too—but he didn’t want to look like the man who had abandoned his wife and child abroad.
“He chose himself,” Laura said. And with those four words, my entire past finally made sense.



















































