He grabbed his radio.
“Dispatch, possible child still in danger at Saint Emily’s Academy. Send every available unit. We need detectives, forensic investigators, tactical officers, and EMS at the camp immediately.”
The hospital hallway exploded into motion.
One officer escorted Director Beatrice away from Renata’s room.
Another confiscated the coordinator’s phone.
“You can’t do that,” she protested.
“I can now.”
The officer held up the screen.
The last message had arrived only two minutes earlier.
“Delete everything before they get there.”
His expression hardened.
“You’re both staying here.”
Detective Owen Harris knelt beside Renata.
“My name is Detective Harris.”
“I’m going to ask you something important.”
“You don’t have to answer if you don’t want to.”
Renata nodded nervously.
“Can you tell me where Daniela is?”
Tears filled her eyes.
“In the old house.”
“What old house?”
“The one behind the trees.”
“The teachers said it was closed.”
“Nobody was allowed inside.”
“How did Daniela get there?”
Renata’s voice became almost inaudible.
“They took her after dinner.”
“Who took her?”
She looked toward the hallway where Director Beatrice stood surrounded by officers.
Then she buried her face against me.
“I don’t want her to hear me.”
Detective Harris stood immediately.
“We’re leaving.”
Less than thirty minutes later, a convoy of police vehicles raced through the gates of Saint Emily’s Academy.
Their lights illuminated the quiet cabins.
The buses were gone.
The children were gone.
Only the staff remained.
Director Beatrice’s assistant hurried outside.
“What’s happening?”
Detective Harris ignored the question.
“Nobody leaves this property.”
Officers secured every entrance.
Another team entered the administration building.
Detective Harris walked toward the oldest structure on the grounds.
It sat alone near the edge of the forest.
A weathered maintenance cottage with peeling white paint.
The windows were covered by wooden shutters.
Fresh tire tracks cut through the gravel beside it.
Someone had been there recently.
An elderly groundskeeper approached nervously.
“Nobody uses that building anymore.”
“When was the last time you were inside?”
“I…I don’t remember.”
The detective noticed sweat forming on the man’s forehead despite the cool evening air.
He walked to the back of the cottage.
The rear door had a brand-new deadbolt.
Everything else on the building was decades old.
The lock practically shined.
“Ram it.”
The tactical team struck the door.
Once.
Twice.
The third hit shattered the frame.
A strong smell of bleach drifted into the hallway.
Mixed with fresh paint.
Someone had tried to clean everything.
Flashlights swept across dusty shelves, broken chairs, and old maintenance equipment.
Nothing looked unusual.
Until Officer Lewis stopped.
“Detective.”
He pointed toward long scrape marks across the concrete floor.
A heavy metal shelving unit had been moved recently.
Four officers pushed it aside.
Behind it was a steel door hidden inside the wall.
No handle.
No window.
Only a small electronic keypad.
Detective Harris looked at the groundskeeper.
“What is this?”
“I swear I’ve never seen it.”
Nobody believed him.
Crime scene photographers documented every inch before anyone touched the door.
The keypad was still glowing.
Someone had entered the correct code only a short time earlier.
The detective turned toward the camp’s maintenance supervisor, who had just been brought over by another officer.
His face turned white the instant he saw the hidden entrance.
“You know what’s behind this door.”
“I don’t.”
“You recognized it.”
The man lowered his eyes.
“I was told never to ask questions.”
“Who told you that?”
His trembling finger pointed toward Director Beatrice, who was being held near a patrol car.
Detective Harris nodded toward the tactical team.
“Cut it open.”
The rotary saw screamed as sparks flew across the hallway.
Miles away, inside the hospital, my phone rang.
I answered before the first ring finished.
“Please…”
“Tell me you found her.”
Detective Harris spoke quietly.
“We found something.”
My heart pounded.
“What?”
Before he could answer, shouting erupted through the phone.
Then someone yelled from inside the building.
“Detective!”
Another officer shouted even louder.
“There’s a child alive in here!”
PART 3 – DANIELA SPEAKS
The tactical officers rushed through the opening with their flashlights raised.
“Police! If anyone can hear us, answer!”
For one terrifying second, there was only silence.
Then came a tiny sob.
“I’m here…”
The voice was weak.
Barely louder than a whisper.
An officer followed the sound to the far corner of the small concrete room.
A little girl sat curled against the wall with a gray blanket wrapped around her shoulders.
Her knees were pulled tightly against her chest.
Her eyes immediately squeezed shut when the flashlights reached her face.
“It’s okay,” Officer Lewis said softly.
“We’re here to help you.”
The child didn’t move.
She simply whispered,
“Am I in trouble?”
The detective felt his chest tighten.
“No, sweetheart.”
“You didn’t do anything wrong.”
The girl slowly looked up.
Her face was pale.
Dark circles hung beneath her eyes.
Her lips were cracked from dehydration.
Detective Harris recognized the photograph from the missing child report.
“Daniela?”
She nodded once.
“I’m sorry.”
The detective blinked.
“What are you sorry for?”
“They said everyone had to wait because of me.”
Nobody in the room spoke.
The paramedics hurried inside carrying blankets and medical equipment.
One medic carefully checked Daniela’s pulse.
“She’s alive.”
“Very weak.”
“We need to move now.”
As they lifted her, Daniela suddenly grabbed Detective Harris’s sleeve.
“They’ll be angry.”
“Who?”
“The teachers.”
“Which teachers?”
She slowly shook her head.
“I can’t say.”
“They always hear.”
Detective Harris looked around the room.
It measured barely eight feet by ten feet.
No windows.
No furniture except a thin mattress.
A bucket.
Several empty water bottles.
And dozens of children’s drawings taped to the wall.
Officer Lewis walked closer.
“Detective…”
Every drawing showed children standing beneath tall pine trees.
Every drawing included the same small gray building.
But something else caught everyone’s attention.
In nearly every picture, there were more children than the camp’s attendance records listed.
One drawing showed six smiling girls holding hands.
Each child had a name written above her head in uneven handwriting.
Renata.
Daniela.
Lily.
Emma.
Grace.
Nina.
Detective Harris checked the camp roster.
Only Renata and Daniela had attended that week.
The other four names were missing.
His expression darkened.
“Forensics.”
“Photograph every single one.”
A technician carefully removed another drawing.
This one showed the hidden room.
Standing inside it was a woman wearing a beige coat.
Officer Lewis looked toward the doorway.
Director Beatrice always wore beige.
Outside, another detective hurried toward the building.
“Harris!”
He stepped outside.
“What is it?”
“We searched the administration office.”
“And?”
“We found employee files.”
“So?”
“They’ve been shredded.”
“Completely?”
“No.”
The detective held up a half-burned document inside an evidence bag.
Across the top were the words:
INCIDENT REPORT.
Below that was another line.
DO NOT NOTIFY PARENTS.
Detective Harris felt anger rising inside him.
“This wasn’t panic.”
“This was preparation.”
Before anyone could respond, Officer Lewis called from inside.
“Detective!”
“You need to see this.”
Harris returned to the hidden room.
One of the paramedics had gently lifted the thin mattress.
Hidden underneath was a small red backpack.
The same backpack the coordinator had texted about.
Still zipped.
Still covered with dirt.
Detective Harris slowly opened it.
Inside were clean clothes.
A stuffed rabbit.
A friendship bracelet.
And a small notebook.
Every page contained dates.
Beside each date was a child’s name.
Some names had check marks.
Others had circles.
The final page contained only four chilling words.
NEXT GIRL:
RENATA ALVAREZ.
The entire room fell silent.
No one spoke.
No one moved.
Detective Harris carefully closed the notebook.
Then he looked toward the ambulance where Daniela was being treated.
He whispered,
“We got here just in time.”
PART 4 – THE DRAWINGS ON THE WALL
The ambulance doors slammed shut as paramedics worked frantically around Daniela.
She clutched the gray blanket so tightly that one of the nurses finally said, “You don’t have to keep holding it anymore.”
Daniela shook her head.
“They’ll get mad.”
“No one is going to hurt you again.”
The little girl wasn’t crying.
She simply stared at the ceiling as though she expected someone to appear above her.
Meanwhile, Detective Harris remained inside the hidden room.
The forensic team had finished photographing every inch of it.
One investigator carefully removed the children’s drawings from the concrete walls.
“There are twenty-three pictures,” she said.
“Every one was made with the same crayons.”
Another investigator measured the room.
“No windows.”
“Steel door.”
“Ventilation from a single pipe.”
“This room wasn’t built for storage.”
“It was built to keep someone inside.”
Officer Lewis examined the walls with his flashlight.
“Detective.”
“There are scratches.”
Long, uneven marks covered the lower half of the steel door.
Some were fresh.
Others had been painted over.
Someone had tried to claw their way out.
The entire team fell silent.
A crime scene photographer documented every mark.
Another technician opened a small cabinet hidden beneath loose wooden boards.
Inside were children’s toothbrushes.
Hair ties.
Tiny socks.
Several friendship bracelets.
Each item was sealed into separate evidence bags.
Detective Harris frowned.
“That’s too many belongings for one child.”
Officer Lewis nodded.
“Much too many.”
Outside, another detective hurried toward the cottage carrying a laptop.
“We restored part of the deleted security footage.”
“Already?”
“The system overwrites every forty-eight hours.”
“We got lucky.”
They watched the recovered video frame by frame.
Children crossed the courtyard after dinner.
Counselors laughed.
Parents were nowhere in sight.
Then the image froze.
Director Beatrice appeared beside Daniela.
She smiled.
Placed a hand gently on the girl’s shoulder.
And walked her toward the maintenance cottage.
No one else followed.
The timestamp was 8:17 p.m.
Exactly three hours before the buses left.
Officer Lewis whispered,
“So she lied.”
Detective Harris didn’t answer.
The footage continued.
At 8:26 p.m., the camera suddenly went black.
Nine minutes later it returned.
Daniela was gone.
The detective closed the laptop.
“That wasn’t a malfunction.”
“Someone disabled the cameras.”
Just then, his phone rang.
It was the hospital.
“Detective Harris speaking.”
The emergency physician sounded serious.
“Daniela is physically stable.”
“But emotionally…”
He paused.
“She wakes up screaming every time someone closes the room door.”
Harris lowered his head.
“We expected that.”
“There is something else.”
“What?”
“She asked for Renata.”
Less than an hour later, the two girls sat together in separate hospital beds with a child psychologist nearby.
No officers questioned them.
No one interrupted.
Renata reached across the space between them.
Daniela immediately took her hand.
For the first time since the rescue, Daniela looked at someone without fear.
She whispered,
“I’m sorry I couldn’t come with you.”
Renata’s eyes filled with tears.
“I thought they wouldn’t let anyone leave.”
The psychologist gently asked,
“Why did you think that?”
Both girls looked at each other.
Neither answered.
Then Daniela slowly raised her trembling finger and pointed toward the hospital television.
A breaking news report showed police searching the camp.
Daniela whispered four words that made every adult in the room freeze.
“They’ll find the tunnel.”