“This,” she said gently, lowering her gaze to the child, “is his son.”
I laughed. I actually laughed, because the alternative was screaming. “That’s not possible,” I snapped.
“You’re confused. My husband would never—”
“He can’t be with his mother anymore,” the woman interrupted softly. “She passed during childbirth.”
The words landed like stones.
“You’re lying,” I said, my hands shaking. “You need to leave. Now.”
She didn’t argue.
She didn’t raise her voice. “You’re the only one who can raise him,” she said instead. “Please.”
Something inside me shattered.
I told her to get away from me. I said things I regret—cruel, furious things fueled by grief and denial. I accused her of trying to ruin the last memory I had of my husband.
She listened. Took it all. Then, without another word, she turned and walked away, the baby’s head resting peacefully against her shoulder.
I stayed behind, staring at the fresh earth covering my husband’s grave. “He was perfect,” I whispered. “He’d never cheat.”
I stood there long after the sky began to darken.
Long after the cemetery grew eerily quiet. Eventually, numb and drained, I turned toward my car. That’s when I heard it.
A soft cry. I spun around. The old woman was standing behind me.
Her hands were empty. My stomach dropped. “Where is he?” I demanded.
She stepped aside. The baby lay in a small basket near the path, wrapped carefully, sleeping. “I can’t do this anymore,” she said, her voice breaking for the first time.
“I’m too old. And he deserves more than I can give.”
I shook my head. “You can’t just leave him.”
She reached into her coat and handed me an envelope.
“Read this,” she said. “Then decide.”
She walked away before I could stop her. I opened the envelope with trembling fingers.
Inside was a letter. My husband’s handwriting. He wrote about a mistake.
About regret. About a woman he’d loved briefly, who never asked for anything. About a child he’d only seen once.
About fear—of losing me, of ruining our marriage, of facing the truth. He ended the letter with a single sentence: If anything ever happens to me, please don’t let my son grow up feeling unwanted. I sank to the ground beside the basket.
The baby stirred and wrapped his tiny fingers around mine. And in that moment, grief collided with something unexpected. Responsibility.
Truth. And the quiet understanding that love doesn’t always arrive the way we planned. I didn’t forgive my husband that day.
But I picked up his son. And I took him home.
