Enterprise, Alabama – The Wiregrass region is gripped by raw emotion and mounting dread as the desperate search for missing toddler Genesis Nova Reid enters its second week with no resolution in sight. The 2-year-old was reported missing from her family’s apartment on February 16, 2026, but what began as a possible case of a child wandering away has spiraled into a haunting mystery surrounded by troubling inconsistencies and disturbing discoveries.

According to initial reports, Genesis’s mother, 33-year-old Adrienne Reid, contacted authorities around 3 a.m. claiming she woke to find her daughter’s bed empty and the front door ajar. She suggested the little girl, last seen in pink Minnie Mouse pajamas, had slipped out unnoticed. But within hours, Enterprise Police Department investigators spotted red flags. Neighbors insisted they hadn’t laid eyes on Genesis for weeks—potentially not since before the new year—casting serious doubt on the timeline.

The mother was quickly charged with false reporting to law enforcement and remains jailed on a steep $1 million cash bond. Her attorney has pushed for a reduction, but prosecutors maintain Reid is the sole individual with direct knowledge of the child’s whereabouts. “She is the only known suspect at this time,” officials have stated, emphasizing the shift from search-and-rescue to a full-scale criminal probe assisted by the FBI and regional agencies.

Search efforts have been exhaustive: teams combed dense woods near the apartment complex, scoured the Coffee County landfill, and followed leads stretching across the southeast. Drones, K-9 units, and hundreds of volunteers joined in, yet no trace of the toddler has surfaced. Amid the operation, a child’s stuffed animal—believed to be Genesis’s beloved teddy bear—was discovered bearing what appeared to be long-dried bloodstains, sending shockwaves through the tight-knit community. This grim find has fueled speculation of tragedy and intensified calls for answers.

Local officials describe the case as deeply personal. “About 90 percent of us have kids,” Enterprise Police Chief Michael Moore said in a recent update. “We will chase every lead, no matter where it takes us.” Vigils have drawn tearful residents placing toys and balloons at the scene, while social media overflows with prayers and pleas for tips—any tip—to bring Genesis home.

As days turn into weeks, fear grows that the window for a happy ending is closing. The Wiregrass stands united in heartbreak, refusing to give up hope while demanding truth. Anyone with information is urged to contact Enterprise Police at (334) 347-2222. The fate of this innocent 2-year-old hangs in the balance, and time is not on their side.