View: 6 Alexandra

When she looked back at the mirror, the girl was closer. She was mouthing words. Eliza leaned in, heart hammering. The girl’s lips formed a single, desperate sentence: “He didn’t leave. He went in.”

To anyone passing, it was a charming Victorian folly—a turreted house with a slate roof and a bay window that caught the last of the twilight. But to Eliza Hart, it was the site of a childhood disappearance that had haunted her for twenty-two years. 6 alexandra view

A sound broke the silence—a heavy, dragging footstep from the attic above. When she looked back at the mirror, the girl was closer

A child. Standing behind her. A small girl in a white nightgown, her face indistinct, holding a patent leather shoe. The girl’s lips formed a single, desperate sentence:

But it was the framed photograph above the fireplace that drew Eliza in: Lydia, beaming, her arm around a man with a kind face and a military posture. Her great-uncle, Arthur. The one who had died six months before Lydia vanished. The one whose bedroom—a locked room at the end of the upstairs hall—Eliza had never been allowed to enter.

Eliza tried to run, but her feet were rooted. The girl in the mirror reached out a cold, small hand. And for the first time, Eliza recognized the child’s face. It was her own—from a photograph taken at age six. The year before she’d developed a sudden, inexplicable fear of mirrors.

Eliza pushed the creaking gate open. The key was still under the third frog statue, just as her mother had described. The lock turned with a reluctant clunk .