And below it, scrawled in uneven letters: “He said we’d never go home.”

The discovery blew the case open. The FBI, state police, and forensic experts descended on Willow’s End.

The original lead investigator, now retired, came forward and admitted something chilling:
Back in 1992, a local man — Elliot Grange, a doomsday prepper and Vietnam vet — had been interviewed briefly but never seriously investigated. He owned land near Briar Creek.

He died in 1994 in what was ruled a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

A new search of his now-abandoned property revealed blueprints. Supply lists. Plans for multiple bunkers.

And one final, handwritten page in a sealed envelope: “The girls are safe below. The world is sick. I saved them from it. They were my angels.”

Despite the recovered evidence, the girls themselves were never found. No bones. No bodies. No living trace.

Forensic scans of the area suggest the bunker may have once connected to a second chamber, now collapsed or intentionally destroyed.

To this day, no one knows how long the girls were kept alive…
Or how — or if — they escaped.

Some believe they died in that bunker. Others believe they were moved. A few… believe they’re still alive. Somewhere.

In 2015, the Hayes sisters were officially declared deceased. But their mother still holds weekly prayer vigils.

At the edge of Briar Creek, a plaque marks the place the shirts were found. It reads: “For Anna, Brielle, Claire, and Delilah — folded, but never forgotten.”