Tarnished Necklace
Cliff had an idea. His first call that morning was to Dave Loewen, the director of Camp Arnes and his employer.
Cliff briefly explained what had been happening. Dave asked a few questions—much like the police had—but his tone was different. There was steadiness in his voice, a weight of genuine concern behind every word.
Then Cliff told him that Candace was expecting Heidi to come for the weekend—and that we believed nothing would have kept Candace from coming home.
The line went quiet for a moment. And then we felt it—Dave’s concern rising to meet ours.
Of course he understood. He had witnessed their friendship himself: the way those two teens moved through the summer like a pair of bright birds, inseparable. For two months at camp they had played and laughed, attended wigwam together each evening—two hearts wide open to the world.
Candace had always worn her heart on her sleeve.
Dave finally spoke, his voice firm and immediate.
“You need a search party. You need a lawyer. I’ll make some calls.”
We didn’t know the full scope of what he intended to do, but it didn’t matter. He believed us. Someone—finally—was taking this seriously. Something was being set in motion.
“Anything you can do would be appreciated,” Cliff said, though even as he spoke, I knew it was the understatement of the year.
I watched him as he hung up the phone. His shoulders lifted slightly, the grey heaviness around him easing. For the first time since the night before, I could see it.
Cliff’s mood had shifted.
Hope—faint, fragile, but unmistakable—had re-entered the room.
Dave Teigrob checked in that morning, expecting Candace to be home—or at the very least, to have called.
People we had reached out to the night before were now calling us back, each voice carrying the same hopeful question, each one bracing for good news. But there was none. Instead, a current of urgency began to ripple outward. Things were moving quickly now, though not in any direction we wanted.
After breakfast, the same police officers who had visited the night before returned. We all sat around the dining room table. Candace’s pictures were still scattered across it, exactly where we had left them in our frantic sorting.
Together we went over every detail again.
Nothing had changed—not the facts, and certainly not their opinion. If anything, they seemed even more convinced that Candace had run away.
“There are over fifty runaways reported every weekend,” they reminded us.
“What makes your case different?”
But something in us had changed.
We were still desperate, yes—but the raw edge of panic was no longer guiding our words. When the officers dismissed our fears, we didn’t crumble the way we had before. As I listened, I realized quietly—and with a faint sense of betrayal—that our loyalties had shifted.
We were cooperating with the police.
But our hope—our trust—had already moved elsewhere.
It rested with Dave Loewen, the one person who had believed us without hesitation.
The officers asked for a list of Candace’s friends and then left.
As soon as the door closed behind them, Cliff said he wanted to walk the route again.
I checked the thermometer outside the kitchen window. It hovered around minus twenty degrees Celsius—minus four Fahrenheit—and was still dropping.
We began calling family—one set in British Columbia, the other in Saskatchewan. And as we spoke the words out loud--Candace is missing—the weight of the morning settled in around us, making everything even more real.
Then the back doorbell rang.
Who would use the back door?
I ran through a mental list of every possible person it could be, and even before I reached the door, I knew. We had forgotten to call Heidi—Candace’s friend. I had planned to phone her first thing that morning, but I’d decided to wait until a more reasonable hour. Then, with the police arriving and everything unraveling, it had slipped completely from my mind.
I opened the door.
There she stood—impatient, bright-eyed, full of anticipation. It should have been a beautiful moment: the beginning of a long-awaited weekend between two inseparable friends. She looked past me immediately, searching for Candace, not understanding why she hadn’t been the one to answer.
Behind her, I saw her father sitting in the car. I waved him in. He looked puzzled, gestured that he would park first, and stepped out slowly.
“Heidi, come in,” I said quietly. “I’m so sorry I didn’t call. Candace isn’t home.”
“Isn’t home?” she repeated, her voice tightening. “What do you mean, she isn’t home?”
I groped for the right words. I should have prepared—should have thought about how to tell her gently.
“Candace didn’t come home from school yesterday,” I said. “We don’t know where she is.”
They both stared at me, stunned, disbelief registering instantly.
“She knew I was coming,” Heidi said, her voice suddenly flat. For a moment, I could see what she was thinking—that Candace was avoiding her. That she had been rejected.
“Heidi,” I said softly, “I don’t think she had a choice. She was looking forward to your visit so much. Nothing would have kept her from coming home. That’s why we believe something terrible must have happened on the way from school. But the police…” I hesitated. “They think she ran away. We’re struggling to convince them otherwise. You know she wouldn’t do that.”
“Candace wouldn’t run away,” Heidi whispered. “I just know she wouldn’t.”
Then her voice broke. “We were going to have so much fun…”
She collapsed into sobs—frantic, disbelieving, undone.
They didn’t stay long.
And the way Heidi walked back to the car—shoulders slumped, head bowed—tore at me. I stood in the doorway and understood, with painful clarity, that Candace’s absence was no longer ours Her loss had begun to spread.
The telephone rang.
This time it was Dave Loewen. His voice carried a new kind of energy—firm, organized, purposeful. He told us that he had assembled a search party. People would be meeting at Candace’s school at one o’clock, in the band room.
Dave had already contacted the president of the Camp Arnes board, Dave DeFehr, a member of the well-known DeFehr family of Palliser Furniture. DeFehr had immediately offered his help. From there, Dave reached out to two lawyers, seeking legal advice and clarifying the boundaries for a private search. He had even contacted the police to request their cooperation and ask that they brief the volunteers. Remarkably, they agreed.
He didn’t stop there. Dave called the rest of the Camp Arnes board, teachers at MBCI, and anyone else he thought might be able to help. He asked Cliff to come and to bring as many photographs of Candace as possible.
Cliff didn’t hesitate. He needed to be doing something.
Fortunately, we had plenty of photos. Candace’s sixth-grade pictures had been retaken, but her package had arrived too late for school picture trading, so we still had every copy.
Between twenty-five and thirty people gathered at the school that afternoon. A police representative briefed them first. The instructions were precise: volunteers could search back alleys and inspect trash cans—public property—but they were to be extremely cautious around private homes. Permission was required to enter any yard. If an abandoned shed or garage needed to be checked, the owner had to accompany them. Under no circumstances were they to wander onto private property or peer through windows. Anything suspicious was to be written down and reported directly to the police.
The volunteers were divided into small teams of two or three. Each team received a map, a photograph of Candace, and a specific area to search, along with a time to return and report.
What struck us most—what humbled me to the core—was that they believed us.
No one questioned our certainty that Candace had not run away. Between the firsthand knowledge of her relationship with Heidi and their understanding of who Candace was, they trusted our instincts completely.
That belief steadied us in a way nothing else had. For the first time since the nightmare began, we were surrounded—not by doubt, but by people willing to search for our daughter simply because they cared.
At the end of the day, Dave called again. He told us they had also contacted churches across the city, asking them to pray—some even dedicating an entire Sunday to Candace. And they had notified one of the city’s news outlets.
Candace’s disappearance was no longer private.
The city was beginning to listen.
The next morning, the minute the Sunday church services ended, our phone began to ring.
News was sweeping through the community like wind through dry leaves, scattering faster than we could gather it. I no longer knew where people were hearing things. Candace’s picture had appeared in The Winnipeg Sun that morning—some callers mentioned it in hushed, trembling voices. Others said her name had been spoken in church, lifted aloud as a prayer.
It was impossible to tell which current was stronger that day: the ancient, intimate network of the church community, or the wide, impersonal reach of the media.
By mid-afternoon, Dave Loewen phoned again, his voice steady, purposeful—something solid to hold on to. He told us he knew a constable in the juvenile division, a man with four days off who wanted to spend them helping search for Candace. Dave also urged us to contact Crime Stoppers, that persistent voice over the airwaves calling the public to attention.
People around him, he said, were encouraging the formation of a citizens’ search committee—a group that could organize the community effort and, perhaps, stand between us and the police in a way we could not. Already it was clear that the police spoke more freely with Dave than with us.
He envisioned another coordinated search, one that stretched far beyond our own frantic footsteps. Students from MBCI could comb the outskirts of the city—the weary railway tracks, the shadowed back alleys, the riverbanks where the light thinned, the empty fields that seemed to breathe loneliness. All of it, of course, would require police approval.
What did we think?
We could hardly find words for the gratitude rising in us.
Later that day, two city newspapers called, each wanting more details, more pieces of Candace. Beneath their questions I heard the real ones: Who are you? Who is this girl? What kind of light did she carry? I answered as best I could.
Again and again, in a thousand small ways, we were being asked to name ourselves—to define ourselves—and to define our daughter.
Describing us was easy; we had lived long enough to know who we were.
But introducing Candace to the world—that was the part that caught in my throat.
Mom and Dad arrived Sunday evening. They felt our panic—our aloneness—and they came simply to be with us.
Once Odia and Syras were finally asleep, we sat down together and began, for the first time, to truly process what was happening. I noticed my parents kept asking questions about Candace—tentative questions, almost as if she were a stranger to them.
“What was she like?”
“What was she interested in?”
Finally, I stopped the conversation.
“Mom—why all these questions? You know Candace. She stayed with you for almost two months. Of all our children, you know her the best.”
“Yes,” Mom said softly. “We knew Candace as a child. But she must have grown so much in these last years. Children change—especially between ten and thirteen. I don’t feel I know Candace as a young lady.”
I understood. And I tried to describe her. But my words were the words of a mother—too close, too tender, too full. How could I possibly describe Candace?
I had been reaching for that answer for two days, and I hadn’t found it. What I needed was something recent. Something she did every day. Something she loved without thinking. Something that would reveal her heart.
I went upstairs to look.
Since she shared her room with Odia, the room itself wouldn’t say much. The decorations scattered through every corner spoke of her creativity, but not of her essence—not her quiet philosophy of life, her way of being in the world.
Then it came to me.
Of course.
Her music.
Her love of music.
Her choice of music.
I remembered the first time she had played that particular song for me. She had put the tape on, and the melody drifted through the room. I had tried to catch the words. Most escaped me, but the theme was unmistakable—friendship.
I knew that if Mom heard it, she would know Candace too.
The tape still sat beside Candace’s bed, tucked into my old battered tape recorder—the one she had claimed as her own. I carried it downstairs and introduced the song to my family.
When the familiar beat began, it felt as if Candace herself had stepped into the room—swaying gently, a dreamy smile on her lips, that faraway, peaceful look in her eyes, completely absorbed in the music she loved.
The words floated out around us.
The pain was so sharp I thought it might tear Cliff and me apart.
I had never truly listened to the lyrics—not like this.
Now it was as though she were singing them directly to us.
Packing up the dreams God planted
In the fertile soil of you
Can't believe the hopes He's granted
Means a chapter in your life is through
But we'll keep you close as always
It won't even seem you've gone
'Cause our hearts in big and small ways
Will keep the love that keeps us strong
It was a good-bye song! She had chosen a good-bye song! Had she known? Had she in some way chosen this song for us because she knew she was going?
Then the chorus:
And friends are friends forever
If the Lord's the Lord of them
And a friend will not say "never"
'Cause the welcome will not end
Thought it's hard to let you know
In the Father's hands we know
That a lifetime's not too long to live as friends
We sat stunned, the tears streaming down our faces.
Mom broke the silence.
“She listened to those words every night?”
“Yes,” I answered quietly.
Mom nodded, and I knew I had found the right way to portray Candace to them. They understood the importance of music. They understood the power of words. They knew that a person’s choice of music often reveals the inner workings of the soul.
They had just become reacquainted with Candace.
I also realized then that the song had been Candace’s parting gift to us—her final message. And I knew I would never be able to listen to it again without being torn apart. It would both comfort us and destroy us.
At eleven o’clock that night, two detectives came by. They told us there was nothing new. They would call again in the morning—Monday—and a new team would meet with us then. They asked us to inform the staff at MBCI that they would be at the school early. They were still confident that Candace would show up there.
I could see they genuinely believed it.
I wished I could share their confidence. It would have been so much easier to sleep holding onto their hope rather than the knowledge I carried inside me.
With that, they left.
As on the day before, they had been our first visitors in the morning and our last visitors at night. Our days were beginning to take shape inside the parentheses of police visits. It felt foreign to everything we were—our values, our rhythms, our quiet life.
I felt sorry that my parents had been pulled into this strange new world with us. And yet, I was deeply grateful for their presence. In the swirl of fear, disbelief, and grief, they remained a steady reminder of the tradition we came from—honesty, truth, steadfastness. If we could hold onto those values, perhaps we could survive what lay ahead.
Winnipeg is a city of about 650,000 people, set squarely in the middle of Canada. It is known for its extremes—hot, dry summers and frigid winters. At the time of Candace’s disappearance, there were nineteen thousand Mennonites worshipping in forty-seven churches across the city.
Ordinarily, that would have been an irrelevant statistic.
But now—now that our daughter was missing—we were searching instinctively for the largest support base we could find.
As I looked around at the growing search committee, I began to understand what was forming around us. At least one Mennonite conference had mobilized. We had representatives from the largest camp in Manitoba, the largest private school, a powerful Winnipeg church, the Mennonite paper, and one of Western Canada’s major furniture businesses.
This was not a small or insignificant group.
And for the first time since Candace disappeared, I understood that we were no longer standing alone.
On Monday afternoon, the police finally conducted an aerial search of the area—at last convinced. I suppose we could have claimed a kind of victory. Public pressure seemed to be pushing the police to act on our case.
The radio stations had picked up the story. Calls were coming in. More food arrived. The kitchen began to overflow with dainties.
The Search Committee had another idea: to distribute posters throughout the entire city, rather than only in the area where Candace had disappeared. They realized that by now she could be anywhere. Because the photos on the first set of posters had been taken in sixth grade—and Candace had changed so much in just one year—the committee contacted the company that had taken this year’s school pictures and asked them to rush the order and double it.
The police delivered the photographs at noon on Thursday for our approval. We kept one picture and gave the rest back to the police and the committee to distribute all over Winnipeg.
Once the picture was released, the school organized another search. This time, almost the entire student body—nearly four hundred students—fanned out across the city, distributing more than three thousand posters to local businesses, sparking one of Winnipeg’s largest searches for a missing person.
But I couldn’t keep my eyes off the photograph the police left with us.
I was shocked. It captured her very essence. There she was—so recent, so alive—her eyes shining. But it wasn’t only her eyes. It was her necklace.
It was unmistakable. She was wearing her tarnished locket—the one she loved so much.
There was a story behind that necklace.
Before moving to Winnipeg, we had lived in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, for almost five years. During that time, Candace had formed a special bond with a girl named Tracy Vickers, who lived just across the street, two houses down. The two girls were inseparable. They were the same size, shared the same interests, and even their differences—Tracy quieter, Candace more outgoing—fit together perfectly. They could lose entire afternoons together, content simply to be in each other’s company.
When we moved to Manitoba, it was heartbreaking to watch Candace mourn the loss of her best friend. As a going-away gift, Tracy gave her a gold-tone locket. Candace treasured it and wore it constantly. Even after it tarnished, she refused to take it off.
That worried me a little. I wondered whether she was adjusting to the move, or whether she still needed Tracy emotionally. I assumed that once she met Heidi at Camp Arnes and the two of them became close, the necklace would eventually come off.
But it didn’t.
Once, while traveling through Saskatoon, we made a point of detouring to North Battleford so Candace could see Tracy again. I assumed that life, as it usually does, would have moved on—that both girls, now nearly young women, would have changed enough for the bond to loosen. I expected the memories to fade naturally and the locket to find its way into a drawer.
I was secretly a bit relieved when we arrived at Tracy’s house and discovered she had another friend visiting. Just as I suspected, Tracy had changed. I felt a twinge of sympathy watching the two girls—once inseparable—stand awkwardly apart, quietly evaluating each other.
We spent the afternoon together, and by the time we left, the girls were enjoying themselves again. Still, something had shifted. The goodbyes were warm, but not tearful.
Driving back, I gently prodded her.
“Tracy has changed?”
“Yes.”
“You’ve changed?”
“Yes.”
“It’s not quite the same?”
Cliff shot me a warning look—leave the girl alone—but the question was already hanging in the air.
Her voice was quiet, but steady.
“No. It wasn’t the same.”
I glanced back at her. She was looking out the window, her fingers tracing the familiar shape of her necklace.
“It doesn’t matter how much we change,” she said. Then she turned toward me, her eyes clear. “When we walked to the store—when we were alone—I saw the old Tracy. She’ll always be my friend.”
And she kept wearing that necklace.
She was wearing that locket on the day she disappeared.
I knew then—convinced—that Candace wasn’t only a sanguine personality. Her love for her friends went very deep. She had the gift of deep, long-lasting connection with many—and she held it close.
*****
At the time Candace went missing, seventy-six other juveniles were reported missing: twenty-nine boys and forty-seven girls. In the previous year alone, the police had opened 4,455 missing children’s cases. Juvenile Division Staff Inspector Bill Heintz admitted to a reporter, “To a certain extent, we’re hearing from parents of other missing children asking for similar attention.”
So our campaign had to show why Candace’s situation was different. We had to establish—clearly and convincingly—that she was not a runaway. We simply told her story.
In the week following her disappearance, without any planning or conscious strategy, we gathered five compelling stories—stories that became the backbone of the campaign to find Candace.
We told everyone about David—the last person to see her—how he had teased her with a playful, flirtatious snow wash, sending her off glowing with delight. We told them that her best friend Heidi was arriving the next day, and that Candace had saved her money so they could celebrate together for two days. We told them about the song she played every night before bed, “Friends Are Friends Forever”—and that her little sister Odia could verify it.
And then there was the tiny tarnished locket she wore in her school photo—the gift from another “best” friend two years earlier—still around her neck despite my gentle requests that she set it aside. That little locket made something unmistakably clear: Candace had many “best” friends, and she was unwaveringly loyal to all of them.
Finally, there was the collective testimony of the Camp Arnes community—the director and staff who had watched her for two summers. They verified everything we said about this thirteen-year-old girl who simply loved her friends. She lived her life of love so openly that anyone who had been a summer camper during those two years would have seen her and Heidi in the back of the wigwam—giggling, glowing, utterly at home with each other.
What we didn’t yet know were the countless other stories of Candace’s remarkable ability to connect. People kept showing up in small, touching ways—like the young lad from Star Lake Lodge, who showed up with a Christmas tree for our bare living room, knowing we probably wouldn’t have the energy to get one while Candace was missing. He understood our grief because he was feeling it too… and we saw it in his eyes.
Within one week of her disappearance, the questions Who was Candace? and What was her state of mind when she disappeared? had been convincingly answered. Even the police finally accepted that she was not just another runaway. Her poster, carrying the most recent photograph, now bore a simple, urgent question: “Have you seen Candace?”
The search was beginning to be called one of the largest efforts ever mounted in Winnipeg for a missing teenager.
This was a huge comfort for us—knowing that we, the city, and all of her friends had done the best we could to find her and create awareness.
But there was nothing—no clue, no hint of where she could be or what condition she was in.
This “nothing” became the answer we had to learn to live with.
Cliff briefly explained what had been happening. Dave asked a few questions—much like the police had—but his tone was different. There was steadiness in his voice, a weight of genuine concern behind every word.
Then Cliff told him that Candace was expecting Heidi to come for the weekend—and that we believed nothing would have kept Candace from coming home.
The line went quiet for a moment. And then we felt it—Dave’s concern rising to meet ours.
Of course he understood. He had witnessed their friendship himself: the way those two teens moved through the summer like a pair of bright birds, inseparable. For two months at camp they had played and laughed, attended wigwam together each evening—two hearts wide open to the world.
Candace had always worn her heart on her sleeve.
Dave finally spoke, his voice firm and immediate.
“You need a search party. You need a lawyer. I’ll make some calls.”
We didn’t know the full scope of what he intended to do, but it didn’t matter. He believed us. Someone—finally—was taking this seriously. Something was being set in motion.
“Anything you can do would be appreciated,” Cliff said, though even as he spoke, I knew it was the understatement of the year.
I watched him as he hung up the phone. His shoulders lifted slightly, the grey heaviness around him easing. For the first time since the night before, I could see it.
Cliff’s mood had shifted.
Hope—faint, fragile, but unmistakable—had re-entered the room.
Dave Teigrob checked in that morning, expecting Candace to be home—or at the very least, to have called.
People we had reached out to the night before were now calling us back, each voice carrying the same hopeful question, each one bracing for good news. But there was none. Instead, a current of urgency began to ripple outward. Things were moving quickly now, though not in any direction we wanted.
After breakfast, the same police officers who had visited the night before returned. We all sat around the dining room table. Candace’s pictures were still scattered across it, exactly where we had left them in our frantic sorting.
Together we went over every detail again.
Nothing had changed—not the facts, and certainly not their opinion. If anything, they seemed even more convinced that Candace had run away.
“There are over fifty runaways reported every weekend,” they reminded us.
“What makes your case different?”
But something in us had changed.
We were still desperate, yes—but the raw edge of panic was no longer guiding our words. When the officers dismissed our fears, we didn’t crumble the way we had before. As I listened, I realized quietly—and with a faint sense of betrayal—that our loyalties had shifted.
We were cooperating with the police.
But our hope—our trust—had already moved elsewhere.
It rested with Dave Loewen, the one person who had believed us without hesitation.
The officers asked for a list of Candace’s friends and then left.
As soon as the door closed behind them, Cliff said he wanted to walk the route again.
I checked the thermometer outside the kitchen window. It hovered around minus twenty degrees Celsius—minus four Fahrenheit—and was still dropping.
We began calling family—one set in British Columbia, the other in Saskatchewan. And as we spoke the words out loud--Candace is missing—the weight of the morning settled in around us, making everything even more real.
Then the back doorbell rang.
Who would use the back door?
I ran through a mental list of every possible person it could be, and even before I reached the door, I knew. We had forgotten to call Heidi—Candace’s friend. I had planned to phone her first thing that morning, but I’d decided to wait until a more reasonable hour. Then, with the police arriving and everything unraveling, it had slipped completely from my mind.
I opened the door.
There she stood—impatient, bright-eyed, full of anticipation. It should have been a beautiful moment: the beginning of a long-awaited weekend between two inseparable friends. She looked past me immediately, searching for Candace, not understanding why she hadn’t been the one to answer.
Behind her, I saw her father sitting in the car. I waved him in. He looked puzzled, gestured that he would park first, and stepped out slowly.
“Heidi, come in,” I said quietly. “I’m so sorry I didn’t call. Candace isn’t home.”
“Isn’t home?” she repeated, her voice tightening. “What do you mean, she isn’t home?”
I groped for the right words. I should have prepared—should have thought about how to tell her gently.
“Candace didn’t come home from school yesterday,” I said. “We don’t know where she is.”
They both stared at me, stunned, disbelief registering instantly.
“She knew I was coming,” Heidi said, her voice suddenly flat. For a moment, I could see what she was thinking—that Candace was avoiding her. That she had been rejected.
“Heidi,” I said softly, “I don’t think she had a choice. She was looking forward to your visit so much. Nothing would have kept her from coming home. That’s why we believe something terrible must have happened on the way from school. But the police…” I hesitated. “They think she ran away. We’re struggling to convince them otherwise. You know she wouldn’t do that.”
“Candace wouldn’t run away,” Heidi whispered. “I just know she wouldn’t.”
Then her voice broke. “We were going to have so much fun…”
She collapsed into sobs—frantic, disbelieving, undone.
They didn’t stay long.
And the way Heidi walked back to the car—shoulders slumped, head bowed—tore at me. I stood in the doorway and understood, with painful clarity, that Candace’s absence was no longer ours Her loss had begun to spread.
The telephone rang.
This time it was Dave Loewen. His voice carried a new kind of energy—firm, organized, purposeful. He told us that he had assembled a search party. People would be meeting at Candace’s school at one o’clock, in the band room.
Dave had already contacted the president of the Camp Arnes board, Dave DeFehr, a member of the well-known DeFehr family of Palliser Furniture. DeFehr had immediately offered his help. From there, Dave reached out to two lawyers, seeking legal advice and clarifying the boundaries for a private search. He had even contacted the police to request their cooperation and ask that they brief the volunteers. Remarkably, they agreed.
He didn’t stop there. Dave called the rest of the Camp Arnes board, teachers at MBCI, and anyone else he thought might be able to help. He asked Cliff to come and to bring as many photographs of Candace as possible.
Cliff didn’t hesitate. He needed to be doing something.
Fortunately, we had plenty of photos. Candace’s sixth-grade pictures had been retaken, but her package had arrived too late for school picture trading, so we still had every copy.
Between twenty-five and thirty people gathered at the school that afternoon. A police representative briefed them first. The instructions were precise: volunteers could search back alleys and inspect trash cans—public property—but they were to be extremely cautious around private homes. Permission was required to enter any yard. If an abandoned shed or garage needed to be checked, the owner had to accompany them. Under no circumstances were they to wander onto private property or peer through windows. Anything suspicious was to be written down and reported directly to the police.
The volunteers were divided into small teams of two or three. Each team received a map, a photograph of Candace, and a specific area to search, along with a time to return and report.
What struck us most—what humbled me to the core—was that they believed us.
No one questioned our certainty that Candace had not run away. Between the firsthand knowledge of her relationship with Heidi and their understanding of who Candace was, they trusted our instincts completely.
That belief steadied us in a way nothing else had. For the first time since the nightmare began, we were surrounded—not by doubt, but by people willing to search for our daughter simply because they cared.
At the end of the day, Dave called again. He told us they had also contacted churches across the city, asking them to pray—some even dedicating an entire Sunday to Candace. And they had notified one of the city’s news outlets.
Candace’s disappearance was no longer private.
The city was beginning to listen.
The next morning, the minute the Sunday church services ended, our phone began to ring.
News was sweeping through the community like wind through dry leaves, scattering faster than we could gather it. I no longer knew where people were hearing things. Candace’s picture had appeared in The Winnipeg Sun that morning—some callers mentioned it in hushed, trembling voices. Others said her name had been spoken in church, lifted aloud as a prayer.
It was impossible to tell which current was stronger that day: the ancient, intimate network of the church community, or the wide, impersonal reach of the media.
By mid-afternoon, Dave Loewen phoned again, his voice steady, purposeful—something solid to hold on to. He told us he knew a constable in the juvenile division, a man with four days off who wanted to spend them helping search for Candace. Dave also urged us to contact Crime Stoppers, that persistent voice over the airwaves calling the public to attention.
People around him, he said, were encouraging the formation of a citizens’ search committee—a group that could organize the community effort and, perhaps, stand between us and the police in a way we could not. Already it was clear that the police spoke more freely with Dave than with us.
He envisioned another coordinated search, one that stretched far beyond our own frantic footsteps. Students from MBCI could comb the outskirts of the city—the weary railway tracks, the shadowed back alleys, the riverbanks where the light thinned, the empty fields that seemed to breathe loneliness. All of it, of course, would require police approval.
What did we think?
We could hardly find words for the gratitude rising in us.
Later that day, two city newspapers called, each wanting more details, more pieces of Candace. Beneath their questions I heard the real ones: Who are you? Who is this girl? What kind of light did she carry? I answered as best I could.
Again and again, in a thousand small ways, we were being asked to name ourselves—to define ourselves—and to define our daughter.
Describing us was easy; we had lived long enough to know who we were.
But introducing Candace to the world—that was the part that caught in my throat.
Mom and Dad arrived Sunday evening. They felt our panic—our aloneness—and they came simply to be with us.
Once Odia and Syras were finally asleep, we sat down together and began, for the first time, to truly process what was happening. I noticed my parents kept asking questions about Candace—tentative questions, almost as if she were a stranger to them.
“What was she like?”
“What was she interested in?”
Finally, I stopped the conversation.
“Mom—why all these questions? You know Candace. She stayed with you for almost two months. Of all our children, you know her the best.”
“Yes,” Mom said softly. “We knew Candace as a child. But she must have grown so much in these last years. Children change—especially between ten and thirteen. I don’t feel I know Candace as a young lady.”
I understood. And I tried to describe her. But my words were the words of a mother—too close, too tender, too full. How could I possibly describe Candace?
I had been reaching for that answer for two days, and I hadn’t found it. What I needed was something recent. Something she did every day. Something she loved without thinking. Something that would reveal her heart.
I went upstairs to look.
Since she shared her room with Odia, the room itself wouldn’t say much. The decorations scattered through every corner spoke of her creativity, but not of her essence—not her quiet philosophy of life, her way of being in the world.
Then it came to me.
Of course.
Her music.
Her love of music.
Her choice of music.
I remembered the first time she had played that particular song for me. She had put the tape on, and the melody drifted through the room. I had tried to catch the words. Most escaped me, but the theme was unmistakable—friendship.
I knew that if Mom heard it, she would know Candace too.
The tape still sat beside Candace’s bed, tucked into my old battered tape recorder—the one she had claimed as her own. I carried it downstairs and introduced the song to my family.
When the familiar beat began, it felt as if Candace herself had stepped into the room—swaying gently, a dreamy smile on her lips, that faraway, peaceful look in her eyes, completely absorbed in the music she loved.
The words floated out around us.
The pain was so sharp I thought it might tear Cliff and me apart.
I had never truly listened to the lyrics—not like this.
Now it was as though she were singing them directly to us.
Packing up the dreams God planted
In the fertile soil of you
Can't believe the hopes He's granted
Means a chapter in your life is through
But we'll keep you close as always
It won't even seem you've gone
'Cause our hearts in big and small ways
Will keep the love that keeps us strong
It was a good-bye song! She had chosen a good-bye song! Had she known? Had she in some way chosen this song for us because she knew she was going?
Then the chorus:
And friends are friends forever
If the Lord's the Lord of them
And a friend will not say "never"
'Cause the welcome will not end
Thought it's hard to let you know
In the Father's hands we know
That a lifetime's not too long to live as friends
We sat stunned, the tears streaming down our faces.
Mom broke the silence.
“She listened to those words every night?”
“Yes,” I answered quietly.
Mom nodded, and I knew I had found the right way to portray Candace to them. They understood the importance of music. They understood the power of words. They knew that a person’s choice of music often reveals the inner workings of the soul.
They had just become reacquainted with Candace.
I also realized then that the song had been Candace’s parting gift to us—her final message. And I knew I would never be able to listen to it again without being torn apart. It would both comfort us and destroy us.
At eleven o’clock that night, two detectives came by. They told us there was nothing new. They would call again in the morning—Monday—and a new team would meet with us then. They asked us to inform the staff at MBCI that they would be at the school early. They were still confident that Candace would show up there.
I could see they genuinely believed it.
I wished I could share their confidence. It would have been so much easier to sleep holding onto their hope rather than the knowledge I carried inside me.
With that, they left.
As on the day before, they had been our first visitors in the morning and our last visitors at night. Our days were beginning to take shape inside the parentheses of police visits. It felt foreign to everything we were—our values, our rhythms, our quiet life.
I felt sorry that my parents had been pulled into this strange new world with us. And yet, I was deeply grateful for their presence. In the swirl of fear, disbelief, and grief, they remained a steady reminder of the tradition we came from—honesty, truth, steadfastness. If we could hold onto those values, perhaps we could survive what lay ahead.
Winnipeg is a city of about 650,000 people, set squarely in the middle of Canada. It is known for its extremes—hot, dry summers and frigid winters. At the time of Candace’s disappearance, there were nineteen thousand Mennonites worshipping in forty-seven churches across the city.
Ordinarily, that would have been an irrelevant statistic.
But now—now that our daughter was missing—we were searching instinctively for the largest support base we could find.
As I looked around at the growing search committee, I began to understand what was forming around us. At least one Mennonite conference had mobilized. We had representatives from the largest camp in Manitoba, the largest private school, a powerful Winnipeg church, the Mennonite paper, and one of Western Canada’s major furniture businesses.
This was not a small or insignificant group.
And for the first time since Candace disappeared, I understood that we were no longer standing alone.
On Monday afternoon, the police finally conducted an aerial search of the area—at last convinced. I suppose we could have claimed a kind of victory. Public pressure seemed to be pushing the police to act on our case.
The radio stations had picked up the story. Calls were coming in. More food arrived. The kitchen began to overflow with dainties.
The Search Committee had another idea: to distribute posters throughout the entire city, rather than only in the area where Candace had disappeared. They realized that by now she could be anywhere. Because the photos on the first set of posters had been taken in sixth grade—and Candace had changed so much in just one year—the committee contacted the company that had taken this year’s school pictures and asked them to rush the order and double it.
The police delivered the photographs at noon on Thursday for our approval. We kept one picture and gave the rest back to the police and the committee to distribute all over Winnipeg.
Once the picture was released, the school organized another search. This time, almost the entire student body—nearly four hundred students—fanned out across the city, distributing more than three thousand posters to local businesses, sparking one of Winnipeg’s largest searches for a missing person.
But I couldn’t keep my eyes off the photograph the police left with us.
I was shocked. It captured her very essence. There she was—so recent, so alive—her eyes shining. But it wasn’t only her eyes. It was her necklace.
It was unmistakable. She was wearing her tarnished locket—the one she loved so much.
There was a story behind that necklace.
Before moving to Winnipeg, we had lived in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, for almost five years. During that time, Candace had formed a special bond with a girl named Tracy Vickers, who lived just across the street, two houses down. The two girls were inseparable. They were the same size, shared the same interests, and even their differences—Tracy quieter, Candace more outgoing—fit together perfectly. They could lose entire afternoons together, content simply to be in each other’s company.
When we moved to Manitoba, it was heartbreaking to watch Candace mourn the loss of her best friend. As a going-away gift, Tracy gave her a gold-tone locket. Candace treasured it and wore it constantly. Even after it tarnished, she refused to take it off.
That worried me a little. I wondered whether she was adjusting to the move, or whether she still needed Tracy emotionally. I assumed that once she met Heidi at Camp Arnes and the two of them became close, the necklace would eventually come off.
But it didn’t.
Once, while traveling through Saskatoon, we made a point of detouring to North Battleford so Candace could see Tracy again. I assumed that life, as it usually does, would have moved on—that both girls, now nearly young women, would have changed enough for the bond to loosen. I expected the memories to fade naturally and the locket to find its way into a drawer.
I was secretly a bit relieved when we arrived at Tracy’s house and discovered she had another friend visiting. Just as I suspected, Tracy had changed. I felt a twinge of sympathy watching the two girls—once inseparable—stand awkwardly apart, quietly evaluating each other.
We spent the afternoon together, and by the time we left, the girls were enjoying themselves again. Still, something had shifted. The goodbyes were warm, but not tearful.
Driving back, I gently prodded her.
“Tracy has changed?”
“Yes.”
“You’ve changed?”
“Yes.”
“It’s not quite the same?”
Cliff shot me a warning look—leave the girl alone—but the question was already hanging in the air.
Her voice was quiet, but steady.
“No. It wasn’t the same.”
I glanced back at her. She was looking out the window, her fingers tracing the familiar shape of her necklace.
“It doesn’t matter how much we change,” she said. Then she turned toward me, her eyes clear. “When we walked to the store—when we were alone—I saw the old Tracy. She’ll always be my friend.”
And she kept wearing that necklace.
She was wearing that locket on the day she disappeared.
I knew then—convinced—that Candace wasn’t only a sanguine personality. Her love for her friends went very deep. She had the gift of deep, long-lasting connection with many—and she held it close.
*****
At the time Candace went missing, seventy-six other juveniles were reported missing: twenty-nine boys and forty-seven girls. In the previous year alone, the police had opened 4,455 missing children’s cases. Juvenile Division Staff Inspector Bill Heintz admitted to a reporter, “To a certain extent, we’re hearing from parents of other missing children asking for similar attention.”
So our campaign had to show why Candace’s situation was different. We had to establish—clearly and convincingly—that she was not a runaway. We simply told her story.
In the week following her disappearance, without any planning or conscious strategy, we gathered five compelling stories—stories that became the backbone of the campaign to find Candace.
We told everyone about David—the last person to see her—how he had teased her with a playful, flirtatious snow wash, sending her off glowing with delight. We told them that her best friend Heidi was arriving the next day, and that Candace had saved her money so they could celebrate together for two days. We told them about the song she played every night before bed, “Friends Are Friends Forever”—and that her little sister Odia could verify it.
And then there was the tiny tarnished locket she wore in her school photo—the gift from another “best” friend two years earlier—still around her neck despite my gentle requests that she set it aside. That little locket made something unmistakably clear: Candace had many “best” friends, and she was unwaveringly loyal to all of them.
Finally, there was the collective testimony of the Camp Arnes community—the director and staff who had watched her for two summers. They verified everything we said about this thirteen-year-old girl who simply loved her friends. She lived her life of love so openly that anyone who had been a summer camper during those two years would have seen her and Heidi in the back of the wigwam—giggling, glowing, utterly at home with each other.
What we didn’t yet know were the countless other stories of Candace’s remarkable ability to connect. People kept showing up in small, touching ways—like the young lad from Star Lake Lodge, who showed up with a Christmas tree for our bare living room, knowing we probably wouldn’t have the energy to get one while Candace was missing. He understood our grief because he was feeling it too… and we saw it in his eyes.
Within one week of her disappearance, the questions Who was Candace? and What was her state of mind when she disappeared? had been convincingly answered. Even the police finally accepted that she was not just another runaway. Her poster, carrying the most recent photograph, now bore a simple, urgent question: “Have you seen Candace?”
The search was beginning to be called one of the largest efforts ever mounted in Winnipeg for a missing teenager.
This was a huge comfort for us—knowing that we, the city, and all of her friends had done the best we could to find her and create awareness.
But there was nothing—no clue, no hint of where she could be or what condition she was in.
This “nothing” became the answer we had to learn to live with.
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