Searching For- Connie Carter In- Info

Searching for Connie Carter in the leaving.

The microfiche whines. I spin the dial past the drama club (Connie as Tzeitel, pigtails askew) and the prom court (Connie runner-up, corsage wilting). She’s always in the second row, third from the left—half a smile, like she knew she’d leave. I print her senior photo. The machine eats my quarter. I feed it another.

Searching for Connie Carter in the ghost links. Searching for- CONNIE CARTER in-

Tonight I search my own face. I see my mother’s eyes. I see a stranger’s debt. I see the shape of a story I will never finish.

I don’t know her. Not really. She was my mother’s roommate for six months in 1986. My mother is dying. She whispers: “Find Connie. Tell her I’m sorry about the coat.” That’s all. No explanation. Just the coat. Searching for Connie Carter in the leaving

A Connie Carter in Portland sells handmade soap. Another in Tampa runs a dog rescue. A third—deceased, 2014, no photo. I filter: Arkansas. High school. Approximate age. Zero matches. Then a comment on a forgotten reunion page: “Connie? She changed her name. Doesn’t want to be found.” The account that posted it is deleted.

The postmaster remembers a forwarding order. “Chicago,” he says, spitting tobacco into a Coke bottle. “That was ’89. Or ’91.” The gas station clerk remembers nothing. The librarian pulls a city directory: Carter, C. – 1414 N. Sheffield, Apt. 2B. I drive twelve hours north. The building is a vacant lot. A for-sale sign bends in the wind. She’s always in the second row, third from

Searching for Connie Carter in the static.