I knew something was wrong long before anyone else cared to notice.

For weeks, my fifteen-year-old daughter Hailey had been complaining about nausea, sharp stomach pains, dizziness, and a constant exhaustion that seemed to drain the life out of her day by day.

This wasn’t the girl I knew.

Hailey had always been bright, restless, alive in the way teenagers are when the world still feels wide open. She loved soccer practice after school. She stayed up too late editing photos on her laptop. She filled the house with laughter when her friends came over.

But recently that light had dimmed.

She moved slower. Ate less. Slept more.

And worst of all, she had grown quiet.

Too quiet.

She kept the hood of her sweatshirt up even inside the house. Her eyes rarely met mine. And whenever someone asked how she felt, she shrugged like the answer didn’t matter.

But it mattered to me.

Every small change lodged itself in my chest like a splinter.

My husband Mark, however, had a much simpler explanation.

“She’s just faking it,” he said one evening while watching television, not even bothering to look away from the screen.

“She’s been throwing up,” I replied.

“Teenagers exaggerate everything,” he muttered. “Probably trying to get out of school.”

I watched Hailey across the kitchen table that night.

She was pushing food around on her plate, barely eating.

“She’s lost weight,” I said quietly.

Mark snorted.

“Emily, you’re overreacting.”