At 16, my daughter went on a road trip with her dad’s new family. On the 5th day, she sent me a postcard saying they’d stay 2 extra days. When she got back, she apologized for not telling me. I said, “But you did! I got your postcard!” She lost all color in her face and said, “We didn’t send anything.” For a moment, we both just stared at each other, caught between confusion and unease. I remembered the postcard clearly—the handwriting looked like hers, the message was warm, and the photo on the front showed a scenic overlook she had mentioned wanting to visit. Still, something about that moment tugged at me. I brought the postcard from the drawer where I kept it and handed it to her. She studied it closely, her fingers trembling slightly. “Mom… this isn’t my handwriting,” she whispered. The realization made my stomach twist. We sat together at the kitchen table as she explained that during those two extra days, they’d been in areas with no cell reception and absolutely no access to mailing services. She insisted she hadn’t sent anything, and no one in her dad’s family had, either.
Trying to stay calm, I took a closer look at the card myself. I’d been so relieved when it arrived that I never questioned the details. Now, I noticed things I had missed—the date stamp was smudged, almost unreadable, and the return address area was left blank. Still, the message felt so personal, as if the sender knew our relationship well enough to mimic her tone. I remembered the exact moment it arrived: I had been folding laundry when the mailman dropped it off with the usual stack of letters. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary then. But now, piecing things together with my daughter beside me, the harmless postcard suddenly felt out of place. Not threatening—just unsettling. Like a puzzle piece from the wrong box somehow ending up on our table.
