The day I went to my wife’s grave, like I did every year, I never

David’s breath caught, his world narrowing to the headstone, the child, and the photograph clutched desperately in the boy’s hands. He recognized the image; it was one of Lucinda’s favorites. A candid shot, taken on a beach vacation. Her hair was tangled by the wind, her eyes laughing as if she harbored a secret only the sea knew.

He had always assumed he knew everything about her, every curve of her smile, every shadow in her past. But this was new. This boy was new.

As David approached, the boy’s eyes flickered open, a haunting replica of Lucinda’s, deep with vulnerability. They held a storm of emotions—fear, confusion, hope—all swirling beneath a blue so intense it nearly stopped David’s heart.

“Hey,” David murmured softly, crouching down to the child’s level. “Are you okay?”

The boy just stared, eyes wide and wild, not yet ready to trust.

“It’s okay,” David continued, his voice steady but soft. “I’m not going to hurt you. I just… I just want to understand.”

The boy hesitated, his grip on the photo tightening, then relaxed just enough to let David catch a glimpse of the image. Even in its faded state, it was unmistakable: Lucinda, pregnant, smiling broadly, a date scribbled in the corner that coincided with a business trip David took years ago.

A chill rippled through him, one that had nothing to do with the weather. He felt the ground shift beneath him, reality blurring at the edges.

“I didn’t know,” David whispered, more to himself than to the boy.

The cemetery around them seemed to hold its breath, the wind pausing just long enough for the boy’s whisper to reach him. “She was my mom. She came to see me sometimes. But then…then she stopped.”

David’s mind raced, piecing together fragments of a puzzle he never knew existed. Lucinda had mentioned doing volunteer work, disappearing for weekends at a time. Now, those absences took on a new, heartbreaking clarity.

“What’s your name?” David asked, his voice gentle but firm.

“Eli,” the boy replied, his voice barely audible over the rustling leaves.

“Hi, Eli,” David said, attempting a smile, though his heart was breaking. “Can I take you somewhere safe?”

Eli hesitated, his grip on the photograph unyielding. “Are you my dad?”

The question hit David harder than he expected, a tidal wave of emotion crashing over him. He had to swallow, to find words that didn’t exist. “I…I don’t know. But I’d like to help you. If you’ll let me.”

Eli studied him through eyes too old for his young features, weighing trust against his own survival.

Finally, he nodded. “Okay.”

David rose, extending his hand. Eli took it, small and cold, but there was strength there, too—a strength David recognized. It was the same resilience that had drawn him to Lucinda all those years ago.

As they walked away from the grave, David felt the weight of Lucinda’s secret pressing against him, a bittersweet reminder of a life he hadn’t really known. But he also felt something else—a spark of hope, a chance to build something new from the pieces left behind.

With Eli by his side, David was determined to uncover the rest of the story and to provide a safe, loving environment for the child who had lain across his wife’s grave, unknowingly offering a connection to a past neither of them fully understood.

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