A Headmaster Spotted One Crooked Signature Before Sophie Vanished-tantan

The rain started before Sophie woke up.

It tapped on the bedroom window in quick little lines, the kind of rain that made the driveway shine and turned the mailbox flag into a red blur at the end of the lawn.

Sophie was eight years old, and she knew the difference between a normal morning and a morning when adults had already decided something without telling her.

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A normal morning had cereal.

A normal morning had her father calling from the kitchen, asking where she left her sneakers.

A normal morning had the garage door grumbling open while he balanced coffee in one hand and his work bag in the other.

This morning had her stepmother standing in the hallway with Sophie’s canvas bag.

It was the bag Sophie used for sleepovers at her cousin’s house, not for school, and definitely not for a place she had never seen before.

“Get dressed,” her stepmother said.

Sophie sat up slowly.

The room still smelled faintly like laundry detergent from the sheets her father had washed before his trip.

On the dresser, a drawing Sophie had made for him leaned against a framed photo.

In the drawing, their house had a crooked yellow sun over it, a blue family SUV in the driveway, and a mailbox with a red flag sticking up.

He had laughed when she drew the mailbox bigger than the house.

“Important mail,” he had said, tapping the paper. “That’s where all serious family business begins.”

That was one of the things Sophie loved about him.

He made tiny things feel safe.

He was away on business that week, the kind of trip that made him sound tired on the phone but always ended with the same promise.

“Friday night, I come home. Saturday morning, pancakes.”

The night before, he had called from a hotel lobby where people were talking behind him and dishes were clinking somewhere far away.

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