After my husband passed away, I was left to sort through his things. I found a garage door opener in his car, even though we didn’t have a garage that required one. Curious, I drove around our neighborhood, clicking the opener as I went.
It worked at a garage on the corner of the street. My heart raced as the door slowly lifted and I saw a dusty old bicycle, a couch, and a wall covered in framed photos—some of which had my husband in them. I parked and got out of the car slowly, almost like I was expecting to be yelled at or caught.
The air inside the garage was stale and warm. It looked like it hadn’t been opened in a long time. There were mismatched shelves along one wall stacked with books, coffee mugs, and board games.
It looked like someone had tried to turn it into a makeshift den. And then I saw the picture that stopped me in my tracks. It was a framed photo of my husband holding a little boy.
They were both grinning, dirt on their cheeks, like they’d just come in from playing outside. It wasn’t just the smile that rattled me—it was the boy. I didn’t know him.
Never seen him. Yet the resemblance was impossible to miss. Same eyes.
Same chin. I took a shaky breath and looked around for anything with a name. Mail, maybe.
A calendar, receipts, anything. In a drawer, I found a birthday card signed, “To Papa, from Mateo.”
That’s when I sat down hard on the couch, legs like rubber. Mateo.
The name meant nothing to me. But “Papa”? That hit different.
I stayed there a long time, just staring at the pictures. Some were newer than others. The boy was growing up in them.
And in every single one, my husband was smiling like a man living a second life. When I got back into my car, I just sat there with the door still open behind me, the weight of it all pressing into my chest. The next morning, I went back.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
