I hadn’t driven on Federal Highway 9 for two decades. Not since my seven-year-old son vanished at a rest stop while I was inside buying him a Fanta. Last week, a flat tire forced me back onto that road, and a stranger ensured I didn’t leave it with the same unanswered questions I’d carried with me for years.
I am fifty years old, and my life has been split in two since 2006.
Before Daniel.
After Daniel.
Before, I was simply a mother driving along Federal Highway 9 with her seven-year-old boy in the passenger seat, listening to him beg for a Fanta as if it were the only thing that could save him. After, I became the woman whose child disappeared at a rest stop while she was inside for less than two minutes.
I bought him a Fanta. I turned around, and he was gone.
At first, the police searched with everything they had. Dogs. Helicopters. Volunteers. Men with clipboards who asked me the same questions over and over until the words lost their meaning.
“What was he wearing? Did he know he was supposed to stay by the car? Could he have run away?”
Eventually, the search was called off. Then, even the few customers who had been there lost interest. Finally, my son became a file in a drawer.
After the first anniversary, I avoided Federal Highway 9 completely. I couldn’t breathe on that road. I couldn’t drive past a rest stop sign without hearing myself screaming for him.
Last Tuesday, my GPS rerouted me because of an accident. I didn’t realize where it was taking me until the sign appeared. Federal Highway 9. My palms grew damp on the steering wheel. I wanted to turn back. I didn’t do it. Thirty kilometers later, my rear tire burst.
I pulled onto the shoulder and just sat there, both hands gripping the steering wheel tight, weeping so hard that the road ahead blurred. Not because of the tire. But because the road had caught up with me again.
A knock on the window made me jump.
Outside stood an older man in a worn coat and cracked boots; his gray beard fluttered in the wind. He looked like someone the road had claimed and never let go.
I rolled the window down a little. “Everything all right?” he asked. “No,” I said. He glanced at the back of my car. “Do you have a spare tire?” “Yes.” “Open the trunk.”
He changed the tire without asking anything else. Quickly. Calmly. Efficiently. As if he had done it more times than he could count. I stood nearby, arms wrapped around myself, watching his hands at work. When he finished, he wiped his palms on a rag and looked at me with the saddest eyes I had ever seen. Then he said, very softly, “Take good care of yourself, Margarete.”
Everything inside me tightened. I hadn’t told him my name. “What did you say?” But he was already walking away. “Wait!” He glanced back at me once more, as if there were more words trapped inside him, then turned and walked toward the trees.
Trembling, I got back into my car. That was when I noticed the Polaroid photo on the passenger seat. A little boy in a red T-shirt. Hair falling into his eyes. A crooked front tooth. Daniel. A photo I had never seen in my life. An address was written on the white border, and beneath it, in shaky handwriting, my name. I called the old police chief—the one who had handled Daniel’s case back then. He had become mayor while I was still searching for my child. The moment he saw the Polaroid on my phone screen, the color drained from his face. “Where did you get that?” he asked. “Do you recognize this address?” “Margarete, listen to me carefully. Don’t go there.” “Why?” He clenched his jaw. “Because that house, if I’m not mistaken, belongs to Roy’s niece.”
The name meant nothing to me. He went on, speaking faster now. “Roy did maintenance work on Federal Highway 9 back then. We questioned him during the search. He said he hadn’t seen anything. If that photo came from him and the boy in it is Daniel, then I missed something back then—something I should have seen.”
I started the engine. “Margarete, don’t do this alone,” he said. “I’m on my way right now.” But I was already driving.
The house was small and unassuming. Toys lay scattered across the garden. A wind chime hung from the porch. A car sat in the driveway. I got out, clutching the Polaroid so tightly in my hand that it bent. Before I could knock, the door opened. A small boy stood in the hallway, holding a toy dinosaur. “Grandpa?” he called out over his shoulder. My knees nearly gave way. Then a woman hurried over and pulled him back. “Leon, come here.” She looked at me, then at the Polaroid in my hand. “Oh God,” she said. “My son,” I whispered. “That’s my son.” She stared at the photo as if she recognized it. “That’s my husband.”
I stepped inside before she could stop me. “Where is he?” “At work,” she said. “At the sawmill in the next village.” “My son is Daniel.” She closed the door with trembling hands. “His name is Danny.” “No. It isn’t.”



















































