She Heard Her Daughter’s Voice… From the Next Room
The house had been silent for three years.
Too silent.
Emma had gotten used to it… or at least, that’s what she told herself. The toys were still there. The small shoes by the door. The drawings on the fridge that she never had the heart to take down.
Everything stayed exactly the same.
Except her daughter.
Gone.
A car accident.
One moment… and everything ended.
People told her time would heal it.
They were wrong.
Time just made the silence louder.
That night felt no different.
Rain tapping softly against the windows. The dim light in the hallway. Emma sitting alone on the couch, staring at nothing.
Until—
A sound.
Faint.
From upstairs.
She froze.
Her heart started beating faster.
No.
That wasn’t possible.
The house was empty.
She lived alone.
Then it came again.
A small voice.
“Mama…?”
Emma’s breath stopped.
Her hands began to shake.
That voice…
She knew that voice.
“Lily?” she whispered, standing up slowly.
Silence.
Then—
“Mama…”
Softer this time.
From the bedroom.
Emma walked toward the stairs, each step heavier than the last. Her mind was racing, trying to find logic… trying to protect her from hope.
But hope didn’t listen.
It never does.
She reached the top of the stairs.
The door to Lily’s room was slightly open.
Just like she had left it years ago.
Her hand trembled as she pushed it open.
The room was exactly the same.
The bed.
The toys.
The soft pink blanket.
Everything untouched.
Empty.
Emma felt her chest tighten.
“Lily?” she called again.
Nothing.
Only the sound of rain.
Then—
A small laugh.
Behind her.
She turned quickly.
No one.
Her breathing became uneven.
Tears filled her eyes.
“I’m losing my mind…” she whispered.
She walked slowly back downstairs, her legs weak, her thoughts spinning.
But as she reached the bottom—
She stopped.
Dead in her tracks.
The living room.
The couch.
And on it…
A small figure.
Sitting quietly.
Emma’s heart nearly stopped.
“Lily…?” she whispered, barely able to speak.
The little girl looked up.
Same face.
Same eyes.
Exactly as she remembered.
“Why did you leave me alone, mama?” the child asked softly.
Emma collapsed to her knees, crying uncontrollably.
“I didn’t… I didn’t leave you… I lost you…”
The girl tilted her head slightly.
“You left me in the car…”
Emma froze.
Her entire body went cold.
Memories flooded back.
That day.
The heat.
The rush.
The phone call.
“I’ll be right back.”
Emma’s breathing stopped.
“No…” she whispered. “No, that’s not what happened…”
But deep down…
She knew.
The police had called it an accident.
A tragic mistake.
A mother distracted.
A child forgotten.
The little girl stood up slowly.
Her voice no longer soft.
“You said you’d come back.”
Emma screamed, covering her ears.
“I DIDN’T MEAN TO—”
But the room went silent.
Gone.
Everything was gone again.
The couch empty.
The house silent.
Emma sat there, shaking, tears streaming down her face.
And for the first time in three years…
She didn’t blame fate.
She didn’t blame the world.
She blamed herself.
Because the silence in that house…
Wasn’t empty.
It was full of a voice—
That would never let her forget.