She sat curled in the far corner of the bed, her arms wrapped tightly around her legs, chin resting on her knees. Her shoes were still on scuffed sneakers with rainbow laces that her mom had tied that morning. She hadn't moved since they'd dropped her here, hadn't even untied the laces that were cutting into her ankles.
Because this wasn't her room.
It looked like a room meant for someone like her, but she could feel it in her bones, it was fake. A setup. Like a pretend room in a furniture store where families posed for pictures they'd never frame. Nothing here smelled like home. Not her mom's primrose perfume that clung to her work clothes. Not her strawberry shampoo that made her hair smell like spring.
Just lemon-scented air freshener and the metallic tang of fear.
She hadn't screamed. Not when they'd snatched her. Not even now. Her body had frozen, her voice stuck somewhere between her chest and her throat, like when she tried to talk in her nightmares but no sound would come.
It had happened so fast.
She'd gotten off the school bus like always, her backpack bouncing against her hip as she skipped down the steps. "Bye, Mr. Locke!" she'd called to the driver, who always waited until she was safely on the sidewalk before pulling away.
Her house was just a short walk, a quick turn past Howard's corner shop where Mrs. Howard always waved from behind the counter, then down three blocks past the house with the red door and the garden full of sunflowers.
She remembered hearing the bark of Rex, the neighbor's German Shepherd, from behind the Murphys' fence. She'd been thinking about whether to have a snack before homework when she'd suddenly felt strange, like someone was watching her.
Then suddenly a hand. Large and rough, smelling of cigarettes and something sharp like cleaning supplies. A cloth pressed hard over her mouth and nose, tasting bitter and making her head spin. Her legs had kicked wildly, her small fists beating against arms that felt like tree trunks.
"Shh, little one. Don't fight it."
A car door slamming. The sound of an engine starting. The world tilting and spinning as darkness crept in from the edges of her vision.
And then blackness.
Now she was here, in this fake room that felt like a prison disguised as a playroom.
Anna sniffled, her small fingers trembling as she gripped the edge of the blanket. The fabric was soft, too soft, like everything else here. Her mom always told her to scream, to run, to fight. "If anyone ever tries to take you, baby, you make as much noise as you can. You kick and bite and run. Promise me." But there hadn't been time. And even if she screamed now no one would hear. She could feel the emptiness around this place, the way sound seemed to die in the air.
The doorknob turned with a soft click.
Anna stiffened, every muscle in her small body going rigid. Her heart started racing so loudly she could hear it pounding in her ears, drowning out everything else.
The door swung open with a creak that seemed to echo forever, and a tall man stepped inside. He was dressed differently than the others, sharper, more dangerous in his politeness. He wore a navy coat that looked expensive and black slacks with a crease so sharp it could cut paper. His shoes clicked across the floor like he owned the world, each step measured and deliberate. Two other men followed, younger, rougher around the edges, with the kind of faces that belonged in her mom's warnings about strangers. They stood at attention behind him like soldiers.
Anna pressed herself farther back against the headboard, her little fingers digging into the blanket.
The man surveyed the room with cold, calculating eyes before they settled on her. He turned to one of the men, a man with a scar running down his left cheek and arms covered in tattoos.
"Is she the one?"
The scarred man nodded, his voice gravelly. "Yeah, boss. That's her. Matches the photo perfectly."
"Good." The man looked her over with the same expression her mom used when checking fruit at the grocery store. Not kindly. Not cruelly. Just like someone inspecting a piece of merchandise for damage, determining its value.
He stepped a little closer but didn't approach fully, like he knew exactly how far he could go before she'd bolt. His voice was calm, almost too calm, the way adults talked when they were trying to convince you that medicine wouldn't taste bad.
"You don't have to be scared, sweetheart. No one's going to hurt you."
Anna said nothing. Her throat felt like sandpaper, and even if she could speak, what would she say? Her mom had taught her never to talk to strangers, and these were the worst kind of strangers, the kind who stole little girls and put them in fake rooms.
She just kept staring at him, breathing in short, shaky gasps that made her chest hurt.
The man waited, tilting his head slightly like he was studying her. When she didn't respond, he crouched slightly, balancing on the balls of his feet but keeping his distance. "I know this is scary. But I need you to listen to me very carefully."
Anna's grip tightened on the blanket.
"I just need your mommy to give me something. That's all. Once she does, you'll go home. Safe and sound. You'll be back in your own bed, with your own toys, before you know it."
The words hit her like ice water. They wanted something from her mom. That meant her mom would be looking for her, would be terrified, would move heaven and earth to get her back.
Still, Anna said nothing. But in her mind, one thought kept repeating like a prayer: My mom will come to save me. She always comes for me.
The man stared at her for a beat longer, his pale eyes searching her face as if expecting a response. When he didn't get one, he straightened with a small sigh and turned to his men.
"Make sure someone brings her food. Something warm, maybe some of that soup from the diner down the road. And get her some juice. Apple juice." He paused, glancing back at Anna. "I want her in good condition. No bruises, no marks. She needs to look exactly like she did when we took her."
The scarred man nodded. "What about contact?"
"Not yet. Let them sweat a little first. Fear makes people more... compliant."
Then he left, his expensive shoes clicking across the floor like a countdown timer.
The other two followed him out, the younger one barely more than a teenager with nervous eyes glanced back at Anna with something that might have been sympathy.
Click.
The door locked behind them with a sound that seemed to echo in Anna's bones.
Anna sat frozen for several seconds, the silence pressing down on her like a heavy blanket. The air in the room felt colder now, and she could hear the faint hum of heating vents and the distant sound of traffic that seemed impossibly far away.
She didn't cry.
Not yet.
Crying was what babies did, and she wasn't a baby anymore. She was eight years old, in third grade, and she knew her phone number and address by heart. She knew her mom's work number and how to make a peanut butter sandwich.
She reached up and slowly wiped her cheek where a single tear had slipped down, hot and salty against her skin.
And then, so softly that the sound barely disturbed the air, almost silently, she whispered the words that had been building in her chest like a dam about to burst:
"Please, Mommy... find me."