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Posted on July 17, 2025 By Admin No Comments on

called 911, hands shaking. “There’s a child locked in a car. He looks about five—white shirt, brown hair, maybe overheating—”

The dispatcher cut me off. “What’s the make and model?”

I told her.

Silence.

Then: “That vehicle was cleared fifteen minutes ago. The child’s safe and with his mother.”

I blinked at the boy, still pounding, still screaming.

“No, he’s in the car right now. I’m looking at him.”

The line went quiet again. Then the dispatcher said, slower this time, “Ma’am, our unit already responded. That child was removed from the vehicle. There’s no one supposed to be in it.”

I backed up. Looked again. Same car. Same plates. Same white shirt.

The boy stopped screaming.

Just pressed his face to the window. Watching me.

Then he held up something in his hand.

A phone. Turned toward me.

My photo. From ten minutes ago. In this parking lot.

I don’t know if it was the heat or the moment, but I felt dizzy. I lowered the phone, still connected to 911, and took a shaky step backward. “He’s holding a phone,” I said into the line, “and it has a photo of me. How would he—?”

The dispatcher’s voice changed. “Ma’am, step away from the vehicle. Do not approach again. Officers are en route.”

I nodded even though she couldn’t see me and stumbled back toward the sidewalk. Other shoppers passed, oblivious. The boy was no longer at the window. Just an empty seat now, as if I’d imagined the whole thing.

But I didn’t. I know what I saw.

And I knew that photo had been taken just after I parked and got out—same blue dress, same tote bag, same messy ponytail. My heart pounded like it was trying to climb out of my chest.

The officers showed up five minutes later. Two cars, lights off, doors slamming as they approached with that careful cop walk—slow, watchful. I pointed out the sedan. “He was right there. Then he disappeared.”

One of them, Officer Drayton, asked, “Disappeared how?”

“Just…gone. He was screaming, then he showed me the phone, then…poof.”

They looked inside the car with flashlights even though the sun was blazing. No kid. No phone. Nothing on the seats.

“It’s locked,” the second officer, a younger guy with a shaved head, said. “Registered to a woman two blocks from here. She called earlier, said her son got locked inside. Paramedics opened the car. Took the boy. Mom drove home. Case closed.”

“Then who did I see?” I asked, my voice barely more than a whisper.

Drayton didn’t answer right away. He turned to his partner. “Let’s call the mother. Confirm everything.”

As they stepped aside to make the call, I stood there trembling. A woman walked past me carrying a watermelon and muttered, “You okay, hon?”

I wasn’t. Not even close.

The cops returned a few minutes later. “Mother confirmed. Boy’s name is Josh. He’s home safe. Eating a popsicle.”

“But the photo,” I said again. “The phone with my face. You think I imagined it?”

Drayton didn’t meet my eyes. “Sometimes trauma plays tricks on us.”

I didn’t argue. I just nodded, thanked them, and drove home with my melted ice cream and soggy lettuce. But that night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept checking my phone, looking through the photos. Just to be sure.

And that’s when I saw it.

A photo I never took.

It was of me, standing beside the sedan. Right before I called 911. From behind, like someone was watching from the trees by the lot. My skin turned to ice.

I don’t use iCloud. I don’t share my phone. And I didn’t take that photo.

I didn’t tell anyone. Not at first.

But the next day, I went back to the grocery store.

And the sedan was there again.

Same spot. Same plates.

Empty.

I walked up to it slowly, phone in hand, ready this time. Looked through the windows. Nothing. No kid. No phone.

Just the backseat full of fast food wrappers and an old stuffed bear with a missing eye.

And yet something told me I wasn’t alone. I looked around the lot. An old man was loading bags. A woman argued with her toddler. A teenage boy leaned on his bike near the bike rack, watching me.

Or was he?

I snapped a photo of the sedan anyway and went inside the store, mostly to calm myself. I walked the aisles in a daze, pretending to shop. But as I reached for a box of cereal, I noticed something that made me stop cold.

A white t-shirt.

Small. Hanging in the back of the clothing aisle.

Like the one the boy had worn.

It was damp.

I don’t know why I touched it, but I did. It felt warm. Fresh.

That’s when I heard it.

A knock.

Faint. Repeating.

I turned toward the sound—nothing but a freezer door, slightly ajar. I walked closer. It was empty except for a single juice box. And taped to the glass, on the inside, was a sticky note.

“You saw me.”

My legs buckled. I sat right there on the floor, hugging my knees like a scared kid.

I left without buying anything.

Back in my apartment, I locked every door and window and turned on all the lights. I didn’t sleep that night either. At 3:12 a.m., my phone dinged. A new photo.

It was me. Sleeping.

Or trying to. In my bed. Taken from the foot of the bed.

I screamed.

Called the police. They found nothing.

No signs of break-in. No fingerprints. They chalked it up to stress.

But this wasn’t stress.

I changed my locks. Got new curtains. Slept with a knife under my pillow.

Still, the photos kept coming.

Me, brushing my teeth.

Me, on the balcony.

Me, crying.

All from different angles. Different times.

I was being watched.

Finally, I couldn’t take it anymore. I quit my job. Packed up. Left town. Moved to a small village in North Wales where no one knew me.

For a while, it worked.

I lived in a cottage by the sea, baked bread, read books. No photos. No signs.

Until last week.

When I saw the sedan again.

Same make. Same plates.

Parked outside the local grocer.

And in the backseat, a boy.

White shirt.

Brown hair.

He wasn’t crying this time. Just staring.

I didn’t call the police.

I didn’t approach.

I just walked past, head down, heart thudding. Told myself it wasn’t real.

That night, I got another photo.

Me, standing in front of the car.

Again, from behind.

I reached out to a journalist. Told him everything.

He listened. Took notes. Promised to look into it.

Two days later, he called.

Said he found something.

“There was a case,” he said. “Five years ago. A boy—same age, same description—left in a hot car. Same model. Same plates. Same mother.”

“He died,” I whispered.

“Yes. And the mother… she was cleared. Said she thought he was with her ex. Miscommunication. But the weird part? That same car’s been spotted in at least eight towns since. Always empty. Sometimes not.”

“And the photos?”

He hesitated. “There are others. You’re not the first.”

“What does it mean?”

“I don’t know. But one of the other women—it stopped for her when she went back. To the place it started. And said goodbye.”

So I did.

I went back to that grocery store lot in the heat of July.

Found the sedan.

Sat on the curb beside it.

And whispered, “I’m sorry I couldn’t help you.”

The air went still.

Then the boy appeared.

Not in the car—but beside me.

Real.

Smiling.

He reached up, touched my arm.

And vanished.

I never got another photo again.

That car? Gone the next day.

Maybe it was a haunting. Maybe guilt. Or something bigger.

All I know is this—some moments change you.

And some children just need someone to say they see them.

If this story moved you, share it. Maybe someone else has seen that boy too.

 

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