The Mother's War
my ears. The ten thousand dollars sat on the sheriff's desk, a dirty monument to their power. I felt a profound sense
was a soldier, he knew the risks.
in power were bought and paid for. I was a cleaner from a forgotten town in t
ernet connection. I had seen stories go viral, seen ordinary people get the world's attent
lumpy motel bed, took a d
ing but clear. "My son is Caleb Johns. He's a musici
looking gaunt and drugged. Then, I held the phone up to my laptop, which was playing the music video tease
.' But he is my son, and he is being held against his will. The local police won't help me. They a
ed it to Facebook and TikTok. I added hashtags: #Wh
the small room, my stomach in knots. Then, my phone buzzed.
s were picking it up. People were dissecting the music video, slowing it down, analyzing Caleb's expression. T
an Scott hosted a live stream. He sat on a plush sofa in a beautiful room, an a
n't quite hide the dark circles under his eyes or the sallow col
s been a lot of crazy rumors going around, and we just wanted to clear the air. My man Caleb here
aleb. "Tell
voice a monotone. "It's... it was all a misunderstanding. My mom
en. He looked drugged, coerced, his soul scraped out.
tiny screen. I knew it was a long shot that they
name of the stray dog we re
e screen. Ryan Scott didn't see it, but Caleb did. His eyes flickered toward the scre
thing. He'd named him Lucky and cried for a week when he'd passed away yea
ce was a void. He looke
into the frame. "Alright, looks like we're having some t
. The public backlash was immediate and fierce, but the label's PR machine was already spinning a new narrative. I wasn't a concerned mother anymore. I was hy