From Texas Public Radio:
This story is part of “When Home is the Danger,” a multi-part series on how Texas is leaving families without ongoing support or monitoring and children in dangerous homes.
Until the end of October, Susie Wilson drove every few weeks the 90 minutes south from Abilene to a tiny speck of a place called Trickham — a ghost of a town with a population last registered as 12.
“This is the first time I have made the trip by myself. Usually somebody is with me, but I figured I’d brave it,” Wilson said after emerging from her car one morning last fall.
Finding the place, two hours east of Waco, takes a good map and keen eyesight.
It boasts no post office or street lights — simply a highway, a church, a historic marker and this cemetery. Farmland surrounds the area on all sides. A herd of cows stood under shade trees along the fence line, finding respite from the summer sun.
Wilson walked between the dirt rows and patches of long grass before she spotted what she was looking for.

Susie Wilson in Trickham cemetery.
Gideon Rogers / TPR
“She’s right there … the one with all the little thingies on it,” Wilson said pointing to a marker.
The 69-year-old bent down to clean a headstone flush with the earth. Stuffed animals — smeared with dirt from rain — and other bobbles and tokens like glass beads lined the stone.
This was where Wilson’s granddaughter, HardiQuinn Hill, was buried after the nine-year-old died — emaciated and bruised — from abuse and neglect.
For the past two years, Wilson and others have tried to move HardiQuinn’s body closer to her family because of the distance and because of the people who buried her here.
Hunched over the grave, Wilson quickly rearranged the glass beads to obscure the hyphenated name emblazoned on it. “HardiQuinn Hill-Anderson.”
“The last name that shows is Anderson. That is not her last name. She was never adopted. She was never anything,” Wilson said.
She gestured toward the plots next to Hardi’s.
“Anderson was the — this family name,” she said, “which is the family of one of her two murderers.”

Gideon Rogers / TPR
Wilson’s daughter — and Hardi’s mother — Dawn Hill-Flesner, 49, and her girlfriend Jamie Anderson, 44, pleaded guilty to the capital murder of the child in 2023. They are currently serving life sentences.
Hardi was one of more than 1,200 Texas children who died from abuse or neglect between 2018 and 2023.
TPR’s review of those child abuse and neglect fatalities found a child welfare system so intent on reducing its contact with troubled families that children have often been left with violent, unstable, drug-abusing parents — while authorities closed cases and walked away.
Hardi was one of more than 400 children in that span of time who died despite her family being investigated by the child welfare system two or more times, and one of more than 300 who had been investigated within a year of their deaths.
She was also one of two dozen children who had been given an Alternative Response (AR) within two years of their deaths. Alternative Response is a less invasive state strategy to respond to allegations of abuse and neglect, focused on allowing kids to remain in homes safely.
Based on TPR’s review, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) — the department responsible for investigating abuse and neglect allegations — failed repeatedly to remove the girl and her brother from a home where they were emotionally abused and physically neglected, including seeing their food intake regularly restricted.
That failure began in small town Texas.
HardiQuinn’s mother stayed with Wilson after splitting from her wife but then took the children and moved in with her girlfriend in Brownwood. Hill-Flesner, recently separated from her wife, had dated Anderson for about six months when they moved in together.
There, Wilson said, her daughter’s behavior changed, and the woman started isolating herself and her two children from the rest of the family. Wilson described Anderson as very controlling, ensuring she was in the room when her daughter spoke to her, cancelling plans the children had to spend at Wilson’s home, and ultimately barring the grandmother from the children.
Wilson said she was aghast at the home her grandchildren were staying in.
The home used the Western False-Front architectural style and looked like a tiny, decrepit, Old West saloon.
When she saw it, the house lacked water, electricity thoughout the home, central heat, a stove and a refrigerator. A toilet sat on the front porch when Wilson arrived the first time. Her daughter said Anderson was renovating the home. But Wilson said the foundation was cracked and uneven inside it.
According to the state fatality report, someone contacted DFPS about the state of the home and the safety of the children.