I thought the flea market would distract me from the ache of missing my daughter. Instead, I found her bracelet — the one she wore the day she vanished. By morning, my yard was crawling with cops… and the truth I’d buried with my grief started clawing its way out.
Sundays used to be my favorite.
Before my daughter, Nana, vanished — Sundays smelled like cinnamon and fabric softener. She’d always play her music too loud, sing into spatulas, and toss pancakes in that chaotic way that left syrup trails across the counters.
Before my daughter vanished…
It’s been ten years since the last Sunday we had together.
Ten years of setting a plate anyway… then scraping it clean untouched.
And ten years of everyone saying the same thing:
“You have to move on, Natalie.”
But I never did. And deep down, I never wanted to.
“You have to move on, Natalie.”
***
The flea market was crowded that morning: the kind of cool, bright day that made everything feel a little more alive. I wasn’t there for anything in particular. I just liked the noise… it drowned the silence I live in.
I was halfway through a lane of worn books and old CDs when I saw it.
At first, I thought I was wrong. But there was no mistaking it: a gold bracelet with a thick band, and a single teardrop stone in the center. It was pale blue like Nana’s eyes when she was little.
I thought I was wrong.
My hands started shaking. I set it down, then snatched it back up like someone might take it.
The inscription was still there, scratched faint but clear into the back of the clasp:
“For Nana, from Mom and Dad.”
I leaned over the table. “Where did you get this? Who sold it to you?!”
The man behind the table looked up from his crossword puzzle. “Young woman sold it to me this morning. She was tall, slim, and had a big ol’ mass of curly hair.”
“Where did you get this?”
“And?”
“But no more questions,” he continued. “$200. Take it or leave it.”
My mouth went dry. I gripped the table edge.
That description — that was her. That was Nana.
I paid the $200 without blinking. I held the bracelet all the way home, gripping it like a lifeline. For the first time in ten years, I was holding something she’d touched.
I paid the $200 without blinking.
***
My husband, Felix, was in the kitchen when I walked in. He stood at the counter with his back to me, pouring the last of the coffee into a chipped mug we’d had since the year Nana was born.
He didn’t turn around. “You were gone a while, Natalie.”
I didn’t answer right away. I walked over, bracelet clutched tight in my hand, my heart thudding with something between hope and fear.
“Felix,” I said quietly, holding it out. “Look at this.”
“You were gone a while, Natalie.”
He turned, his brows furrowed. “What is it?”
“You don’t recognize it?”
His eyes dropped to the gold band in my palm. I held it higher, right under his nose.
His jaw locked. “Where’d you get that?”
“At the flea market. I was wandering around.”
“You bought it?”
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