I moved into a quiet neighborhood after my divorce, hoping my son and I could start over. Then he began calling our kind new neighbor “the apology man.” I thought it was innocent until I heard Joseph whispering sorry behind the fence and saw what he was hiding there.
My son kept calling our new neighbor “the apology man,” and at first, I thought it was one of those odd little names kids invent when adults confuse them.
Then I heard Joseph behind the fence.
“I’m sorry, buddy,” he whispered. “I should’ve answered.
I’m so sorry.”
I moved closer before I could talk myself out of it.
Through a narrow gap in the cold wooden fence, I saw him kneeling in the dirt with both hands wrapped around the handlebars of a tiny red bicycle. It had training wheels, chipped paint, and a faded blue helmet beside it.
Joseph pressed his thumb over the bell.
It gave one weak ring.
Then he bowed his head and cried.
My blood ran cold because my five-year-old son had been waving to that man every morning.
Three weeks earlier, I would’ve said Joseph was the best part of our new neighborhood. That was before I understood that grief could look almost exactly like kindness.
***
The months before my divorce from Alex had worn me thin.
There were lawyer emails, custody forms, late-night arguments, and mornings when Nick asked why Daddy didn’t sleep at our house anymore.
By the time the schedule was final, I was exhausted.
The little house on Maple Lane was supposed to be our fresh start.
“It’s small,” Nick said on moving day. “Daddy’s house has a pool.”
I swallowed the sting in my throat. “It is small,” I said.
“But it’s ours. That’s a pretty good start.”
I bent to pick up a box marked KITCHEN, even though I was pretty sure it held nothing but Nick’s toys.
A voice called from the walkway. “You want the heavy ones in the kitchen or the room where you plan to pretend you’ll unpack them?”
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