At the airport, I found my daughter-in-law sitting on a bench with my grandson asleep in her lap and three battered suitcases at her feet. For a second, I didn’t understand what I was looking at. JFK was moving around me the way airports always move—rolling luggage, impatient footsteps, announcements echoing over the terminal, the smell of burnt coffee drifting from a stand near baggage claim.
I had just stepped off a flight from London, still wearing the same charcoal suit I had worn through a closing meeting that lasted too long and a plane ride where I slept barely an hour. I was expecting my driver. I was expecting the usual black sedan at the curb, the usual polite nod, the usual quiet ride back to Long Island while I answered messages and pretended the world still ran on order.
Instead, I saw Elena. My daughter-in-law sat under the harsh terminal lights in a faded denim jacket, her shoulders curved protectively around my four-year-old grandson, Leo. His little face was pressed against her neck, red from crying, his small sneakers dangling off the edge of the bench.
Beside her were three suitcases I recognized from the guest house—one blue hard-shell case with a cracked corner, one old brown leather bag that had belonged to my son Liam, and one small dinosaur backpack with Leo’s name stitched on it. Elena’s hair had come loose from its ponytail. One cheek was streaked with tears she had tried and failed to hide.
In her right hand, she held a crumpled envelope so tightly her knuckles had gone white. Something inside me went very still. “Elena?”
She flinched.
Not turned. Not looked up. Flinched.
That was the first thing that told me this was worse than a misunderstanding. Her eyes snapped toward me, wide and frightened, and then recognition crossed her face. Relief came after it, but not the simple kind.
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