The morning after her perfect wedding, my sister vanished without a trace—no note, no goodbye, just silence. For ten years, we lived with questions. Then, in a dusty attic box, I found a letter she wrote the day she disappeared—and everything changed.
The last time I saw my sister Laura, she was spinning in circles on the makeshift dance floor Daddy had hammered together that morning, her bare feet moving through beer-slicked plywood and soft patches of dirt. The hem of her dress, once ivory, was stained with a mix of barbecue sauce, spilled punch, and good old Iowa dust. But none of that mattered.
She looked like joy wrapped in lace. The backyard glowed under strings of yellow lights Mama had saved from Christmas. The scent of lilacs drifted from the bushes, mixing with the smoke from Uncle Randy’s grill.
Folks were laughing, kids chasing fireflies, and old country music floated in the air like it had nowhere better to be. “You’re really married now,” I said as we leaned over the lemonade table, both of us sticky and flushed. She turned to me, her cheeks pink, eyes sparkling.
“I know. Isn’t it wild?”
Luke, her new husband, waved from the other side of the yard, where he was laughing with the groomsmen. He looked like the luckiest man in the world.
Laura waved back but then glanced down for just a second. Her smile faltered. I didn’t notice it then.
Not really. I was too caught up in the glow of it all—the celebration, the noise, the sense that we were all exactly where we were meant to be. But now, I can see it plain as day.
That flicker in her eyes. Like she was holding something in. Like she was already halfway gone.
The next morning, she was. The motel room where they spent their wedding night was spotless. Her wedding dress was folded neatly on the bed.
Her phone sat on the nightstand, untouched. No note. No message.
No goodbye. We called the police. Neighbors.
Friends. Volunteers combed the woods. The pond was dragged twice.
Luke was questioned, then questioned again. But nothing came of it. Laura had disappeared, clean as a snap of the fingers.
Like wind through dry corn, slipping out without warning. And after all the noise of the search, all we were left with was silence. Heavy.
Cold. Unforgiving. For ten years, Laura became a ghost in our family.