Chapter 2: The Truth Beneath the Rain
Thomas stepped back slowly, as if approaching her too fast might break reality.
“I never stopped looking for you,” he said.
The girl laughed—short, sharp, disbelieving.
“That’s impossible.”
But her eyes betrayed her.
Thomas reached under the counter and pulled out an old wooden box. The hinges were rusted. His hands shook as he opened it.
Inside were photographs.
Hundreds of them.
Missing posters. Newspaper clippings. A child’s drawing of a small house and two stick figures holding hands.
The girl’s breath stopped when she saw it.
One drawing had a name written in childish handwriting:
Clara Whitaker
Her knees weakened slightly, but she caught herself.
“No,” she whispered. “That’s not me.”
But she didn’t look away.
Thomas slid a photo across the counter. “This was taken the day before you disappeared.”
The girl stared at it.
A little girl. Same eyes. Same face.
Standing beside Thomas, holding the same locket.
Her fingers began to tremble uncontrollably.
“I… I don’t remember this,” she said—but her voice was no longer firm.
It was scared.
Thomas stepped closer, softer now. “Then someone made sure you wouldn’t.”
A long silence followed.
Then the girl suddenly backed away.
“No. Stop. You’re trying to confuse me.”
But she wasn’t angry anymore.
She was unraveling.
Outside, lightning flashed—and for a split second, the shop reflected both of them in the glass.
Father.
Daughter.
And a missing past standing between them like a wall of broken time.
May you like
Then she whispered something barely audible:
“…Why do I feel like I’m lying?”
