Immediately—bright coral, spaghetti straps, not hers. Chest floral embroidery? I’ve seen it, but not in our laundry.
My niece shrugs like she’s trying not to grin when I ask where her shorts went. “Swapped,” she says. End of story. Swapped.
Ms. Leena, her instructor, denies seeing the difference. But they inspect restrooms. Ziplock bags hold spare garments. And we always carry her backup shorts with the label sewed inside—my mom’s old technique, birthstone thread.
Now none of them are in her cubby. A little velvet purse in the corner. I almost miss it.
The purse contains folded pink stationery with small gold stars. A child’s chaotic yet intentional scribble covers the page.
It says, “She wanted to be princess today. I consented.”
No name. No explanation. Just that.
Presenting it to my niece. She laughs and shrugs again, like nothing happened.
“Who gave you the dress?” Ask her softly.
She wraps hair around her finger. “She did. Using pouch. It was my today, she said.”
“Who’s she?”
She hesitates, then says, “Hallway girl. Someone who constantly has gum.”
This chills me. They don’t chew gum in preschool. I attended parent meetings. Almost a crime.
“Does she attend your class?”
“No,” my niece replies too pleasantly. “She’s in the hall.”
The way she says it sounds like someone lives in the clouds.
Telling my sister that night. She dismisses it, saying kids switch clothing often. I then show her the outfit. Her face alters.
“I’ve seen that flower before,” she mutters. Back in high school. This chick… Lydia.”
She glances at the stitching without speaking. She ignores my request. Most likely nothing.
But I know my sister. I know her lies.
The following morning, I take my niece to preschool. I observe all kids that enter. I scan every hall.
Nobody’s wearing coral. Nobody has gum. Strangely, a door at the west hallway’s end is sealed with peeling crimson paint. The sign says “Storage—Do Not Use.”
A girl stands by. She chews something and is six or seven, too old for preschool. Her clothing is light yellow. Her sneakers clash.
She vanishes as I blink.
My niece rushes to me in her customary shorts at pick-up. The coral garment vanished. No explanation, no trace.
I inspect the velvet purse again at night. A fresh note.
This means, “Tomorrow is someone else’s turn.”
Handwriting differs.
Next day, I give Ms. Leena the letter. She frowns and wonders whether my niece is playing a complicated game. I can see she doesn’t believe it either.
She whispers that extra clothing, books, and sparkly shoes have gone missing. Nothing major or scary. Just odd exchanges no one could understand.
I inquire about the hallway girl.
She blinks. “What girl?”
I describe the outfit, gum, and bag.
Her face freezes.
“We did have a student named Lydia,” she admits softly. Years ago. Before I began. She died.”
Stomach drops.
“She choked,” she says. On gum. In naptime.”
Unable to talk.
“No one talks about it much,” she says. Although it was before my time, the personnel present then… They avoid that hallway.”
I had trouble sleeping that night.
My niece begs to remain home in the morning. Not interested in playing princess again.
“She says it’s my turn forever now,” she murmurs.
I insist she doesn’t have to do anything she doesn’t want to. I vow to handle it.
When I drop her off, I wait in my vehicle. I stay. I sat watching the hallway entry from afar. An hour passes. Then two.
I notice movement eventually.
A youngster approaches the red storage door. Alone. She changed her shoes. Unseen ones.
Inside, she slides.
Whatever motivates me, I get out of the automobile. I enter the school, pass the admin desk, and continue to the corridor.
Cracked storage door.
Dusty shelves, discarded toys, and fading labels fill the gloomy interior. But the far end glows somewhat.
A girl sits cross-legged picking through clothing.
The coral dress, glitter heels, and unicorn bag from last autumn seem familiar.
She glances up.
“You’re not supposed to be here,” she asserts.
“Neither are you,” I say.
Her head tilts. I assist. Want to be exceptional. So I let them.”
I look around. The air is pepperminty. A damaged music box plays faint music.
“What do you gain?” Asking her.
She blinks slowly. Someone must remember me.”
She takes sneakers with “Lydia” written in marker from a box.
“I just want to play,” she whispers.
Something softens me.
“You can’t keep taking from them,” I say softly. It’s not how playing works.
Shoes are hugged to her chest.
“I didn’t mean to stay,” she admits. “I got lost.”
Sitting alongside her. We get lost occasionally. But you may return.”
She frowns. “How?”
“Let go,” I whisper.
She first shakes her head. She gingerly returns the shoes to the box.
Next, the pouch.
Finally, the dress.
The light flickers. The space breathes.
She vanishes as I blink.
I take box.
I tell the front office I discovered it in the janitor’s closet. No one questions me. But Ms. Leena’s eyes tell me she knows.
The following day, my niece is cheery again. Nobody mentions Lydia. No velvet bag. No notes.
We wash everything from the package that weekend. We label. They’re donated.
My niece puts a short letter in the coral dress pocket.
It states, “You can be remembered in good ways, too.”
Weeks pass. Stop wearing odd things. Last hallway sighting.
However, my niece brings home a sketch one Friday. Just crayon lines and cheerful smiles. Playground. Three girls. A yellow dress is worn. Holding hands.
What’s this? I ask.
She shrugs. Someone who was sad. Now she’s fine.”
I kind of trust her.
A month later, the school writes. The old storage passageway is being demolished for a reading nook.
They unearth hundreds of lost toys, clothes, and drawings. One slightly visible shoe with “Lydia” on it.
The principal requests for donations for the new reading room.
My niece recommends her favorite novel about a girl sharing her crown.
A brief letter is taped to the inside cover. “For the girl who made me princess.”
We remember Lydia that way.
Not as a hallway ghost.
But as a youngster who wants to play and not be forgotten.
Sometimes, those who take the most may be seeking attention.
Helping them let go is sometimes the nicest thing.
The school community room currently displays the coral garment. They put it in a shadow box with a plaque saying:
“She showed her magic. We recall.”
Things are odd in life. Small mysteries lead to huge ones. Something healing.
We live believing everything must make reason and fit into a box. Sometimes the unspoken kindnesses mean the most.
If someone wants the crown for a day, let them. If someone wants to be remembered—remember well.
If you discover a velvet bag in your cubby, consider opening it. Maybe listen.
Perhaps return someone home.
If this tale touched you, tell a second-chance believer. Likes help more people discover magic.