I believed I knew every chapter of my husband’s life until the day we buried him. Then a teenage boy I’d never seen before walked up to me and uttered words that threw my life into a tailspin.
I had been married to Daniel for 28 years.
It was long enough for me to believe I knew everything about him, including his habits and past.
I knew the stories about his childhood, his college years, and his first apartment with broken heating and secondhand furniture.
We were so intertwined that I knew how he stirred his coffee counterclockwise and that he hummed off-key when he was nervous.
Daniel and I were simple, with no secret bank accounts or sudden business trips.
Instead, we built a steady life around routines: Sunday grocery runs, shared coffee before work, and quiet evenings on the couch watching old detective shows.
We never had children, and that’d been our one silent ache, but we learned to live around it.
When I lost the love of my life, it was sudden.
A heart attack in the driveway.
One minute, he was arguing about whether we needed to repaint the fence. Next, I was in the back of an ambulance holding his hand and begging him not to leave me.
“Daniel, stay with me!” I cried.
“Please, don’t do this!”
But he was already slipping away.
His hand had gone slack before we’d even reached the hospital.
The funeral was small.
Mostly family, a few coworkers, and some neighbors.
I stood by the casket, greeting people I barely registered.
“I’m so sorry, Margaret,” my sister Claire whispered.
“He was a good man,” his boss said.
“Call me if you need anything,” someone else added.
I nodded and said thank you repeatedly until my face hurt.
That’s when I noticed him.
He was tall, maybe around 15, and wore a dark jacket that looked slightly too big.
His nervous hands were twisting together as if bracing for something.
He wasn’t standing with or talking to anyone. He just appeared to be watching me from across the room, as if waiting for his turn.
When the line thinned out, he walked straight toward me.
Up close, I could see how young he really was. His jaw was still soft with youth, and his eyes carried something heavy that didn’t belong on a boy his age.
“I’m sorry for your loss,” he said politely.
“Thank you,” I replied automatically.
Then he swallowed hard and added quietly, “He told me if anything ever happened to him…
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