It started with five words that didn’t belong to my son.
“I am so sorry, Mom.”
No explanation. No follow-up. Just a message that felt wrong in a way I couldn’t explain, only recognize. Tom had never apologized without meaning to fix something. Even as a child, he would follow every “sorry” with a reason, a plan, or at least an attempt to make things right.This time, there was nothing.
I called him immediately. Voicemail. Again. Then his phone went off.
I told myself not to panic. College kids lose charge, get distracted, fall asleep in the middle of the day.
But something deeper—something instinctive—refused to let it go.
Ten minutes later, my phone rang from an unknown number.
“Hello, are you Tom’s mother?”
That was the moment everything shifted.
The voice on the other end explained that Tom had left something behind—a box—and asked that it be given to me. No one knew where he was. No one knew why he had gone.
That was enough.