Part 2: For one second, the father said nothing.

That was how the girl knew this was worse than she understood.

The fair still glowed behind them like nothing bad had happened there. Laughter drifted through the dusk. Somewhere a game buzzer went off. But at the car, the whole world had narrowed to a pink wristband in a dirty little hand.

He took it carefully.

The name written inside was Mila.

Too young for a teen.Too small for an adult.Too personal to ignore.

“Where exactly did you find this?” he asked.

The girl pointed back toward the darker edge of the fairground parking area.

“Near Mom’s car. By the blue fence.”

His face changed.

Not because of the name.

Because he knew the blue fence area was where staff parked, not guests.

The girl kept going now, because she had already crossed into the truth and children rarely stop once they realize adults need the whole thing.

“I thought it was mine first,” she whispered. “But then I heard Mom.”

He swallowed hard. “What did she say?”

The girl looked down.

“She said, ‘If she keeps asking for her dad, put the music on louder.’”

Silence.

The father stared at the wristband.

Now it wasn’t just suspicious.

It was a trail.

The little girl’s tears came harder.

“I didn’t know if I should tell you,” she said. “But then I saw Mom crying.”

That hit him differently.

Because guilty people panic.But trapped people cry.

He looked toward the fairgrounds, then back at his daughter.

“Was she alone?”

The girl shook her head.

“There was a man,” she whispered. “And a little girl with pink shoes.”

The father stopped breathing for one beat.

Pink shoes.

Because suddenly the wristband felt less like evidence and more like a child left too close to the wrong adults.

Then the girl said the line that turned the whole evening cold:

“Mom told the man, ‘If he sees her first, everything is over.’”

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