Arden Maynor—the six-year-old girl from Widow Hills, Kentucky, who was swept away into the storm drain system while sleepwalking. But we will mark the ten-year anniversary in a matter of weeks.
If you were to visit Widow Hills now, you wouldn’t see much evidence of what happened over the three-day search-and-rescue operation. Before the rescue, the town wasn’t known for much other than its name: Widow Hills was so named because of the solitary cluster of mountains in the distance, where the clouds settled regardless of the surrounding weather, like three heads huddled together—a pocket of rain you could see across a clear sky.
But in the span of hours, Widow Hills went from a small town fading into obscurity to a place on the map.
Town and state officials never anticipated a storm like that. There were locally provided maps of the unmarked drains, the unofficial creeks. What would a six-year-old do while sleepwalking?
The community demanded attention, and they got it. The people of Widow Hills saved their own, and it’s still a source of pride and respect, as evidenced by the plaque that remains at the spot where Arden Maynor was found, commemorating the rescue.
Business was never so good as in the days during and following the search. But after the search-and-rescue teams, the volunteers, and the surrounding media left, a fog akin to depression settled over the town.
Ten years later, and the town of Widow Hills appears much as it always has in the days before Arden’s disappearance—with the exception of some of the faces. Laurel and Arden Maynor left soon after, but ask anyone who grew up here, and they remember.
And so do we.
Why did this case grip a nation? What makes a story like this take off?
Was it the initial event? The fact that she was sleepwalking—and suddenly, every parent could imagine this happening, something beyond all logical control?
Was it the photo plastered across the local news in that first press conference: the large brown eyes, her haunted expression, so serious for a child of six years old?
The picture of that tiny shoe stuck in the grate beside the open drainage pipe?
Did the media just like the name Widow Hills, deciding it would reach more viewers?
Or maybe we were all desperate for something to hope for, something bigger than ourselves.
More likely, it was a combination of all these things—an idea catching and spreading, capturing us all.
Whatever the reason for its initial reach, it was a story that could bond people together. They would celebrate together or they would grieve together.
That was the one sure thing: Whatever happened, we would be in it together.
Is it any surprise that people want to know what’s become of Arden Maynor, no longer a child but a teenager? This person they prayed for and hoped for?
They bore witness to it all, felt what her mother must have felt, kept vigil through the night beside Laurel. They witnessed the moment she was found; they followed every moment of her rescue.
If you watched, if you helped, if you prayed and hoped and cheered, you already know the truth: We were a part of something good. Something that mattered. Arden Maynor is alive today and living her life because of the actions of so many. And that still matters a decade later.
That is something that will always matter.
CHAPTER 14
Sunday, 12 p.m.
MY HEAD WASN’T RIGHT.
It was the lack of sleep. It was my fear of going home. It was the way I partly expected everyone to start disappearing from my life.
And so I wasn’t sure whether I was seeing things that shouldn’t be there—everything through the filter of a dead body near my house, the investigation, the lack of sleep. Whether I was seeing danger in places it didn’t exist.
I knew Bennett would have the most logical assessment. And I was right.
Bennett had talked me down from the ledge when I called him from Elyse’s vacant apartment in a panic, explaining that she wasn’t there, that her car was still in the lot, that her purse and her phone were left behind. Bennett walked through each step, carefully and logically: Picked up by that guy, the bartender—Trevor? Went out drinking. Using a different purse. The forgotten phone would explain why she hadn’t answered our calls . . .
His tone made me put down her cell, stop scrolling through the notifications—me, Bennett, work, repeat—and feel like an intruder. Which, at the moment, I was.
She quit, she was pissed, she went out. It made sense. But I couldn’t shake