Lena Whitaker’s hands trembled as she sped down a dark Alabama back road, her heart pounding while six-year-old Mila sat silently in the back seat. Tears slid down the child’s cheeks, but she hadn’t spoken in hours. Earlier that evening, Mila had returned from a weekend with her father, Evan, acting strangely—flinching when Lena tried to hug her and refusing to sit or bend without crying in pain. Terrified something terrible had happened, Lena rushed her daughter to County General Hospital, begging her to stay awake.
At the hospital, doctors quickly took Mila away while Lena tried to explain what little she knew. When X-rays were reviewed, the medical team discovered something inside the child’s body that shouldn’t have been there. Concerned, they contacted law enforcement, and Detective Rachel Monroe began asking difficult questions about Mila’s weekend and her family situation. As fear and guilt overwhelmed Lena, even Evan was called in for questioning while the investigation unfolded.
Hours later, pediatric specialist Dr. Elaine Porter requested a second review and began asking an unexpected question—whether Mila had a habit of eating things that weren’t food. Slowly, memories surfaced: chewing on a pink eraser, a crayon, even bits of chalk when she thought no one was watching. Looking through old photos and videos confirmed the pattern. Dr. Porter explained that Mila likely had pica, a condition that causes children to crave and ingest non-food objects, often linked to stress or nutritional deficiencies.