What started as a normal afternoon at the mall turned strange when I noticed a barefoot boy alone in the parking lot, crying for his “other dad”—a man he said didn’t speak with his mouth.
When we brought him inside, he clung to my hand with surprising trust. We gave him a toy and juice, and slowly he calmed, though his eyes kept scanning the room as if searching for someone invisible. He told us his name was “Little Star,” given by this silent father he called Whisper.
As we walked him toward the theater he’d mentioned, he reached for the air, as if holding an unseen hand. Then he smiled brightly and whispered, “Whisper’s here.” The words sent a chill through me.
We called the police, who took over, checking cameras and missing child reports. But no one recognized him, and no answers came.
Days later, I still think about Little Star—how he trusted so completely in a guardian no one else could see. Maybe Whisper was imaginary, maybe something more. Either way, his belief carried him through, reminding me of the strange resilience children find in faith, whether rooted in reality or not.