For years. I didn’t know whether to cry or scream. I tried to find Imelda.
Small town, only so many options. Took a week and a few awkward calls, but eventually someone said, “Oh, you mean Imelda with the kid who looks just like old Vic?”
Vic. My husband.
She lived only two streets over. I walked there. Every step felt like wading through wet cement.
When I knocked, a woman about my age answered. “Yes?” she asked cautiously. “I think we need to talk,” I said, holding up the garage door opener like a badge.
We sat at her kitchen table while Mateo played video games in the other room. I couldn’t stop staring at the boy. She told me everything.
They’d had a fling a few months before Vic and I met. She never told him at first, but after Mateo was born, she reached out. Vic insisted he’d do the right thing but didn’t want to ruin his marriage.
So he helped out quietly—financially, emotionally, from a distance. That garage was their meeting place. Their neutral ground.
“He wanted to be part of Mateo’s life,” she said softly. “But he was terrified of losing you.”
I asked her the only thing I could manage to get out without my voice cracking. “Was he… a good dad?”
She smiled.
“He showed up. That kid adored him. Still does.”
I left without really knowing how to feel.
Betrayed, yes. But also… strange pride? Confusion?
I wasn’t sure if I was mourning the man I thought I knew, or the one I didn’t get to know completely. In the weeks that followed, I couldn’t stop thinking about Mateo. About how he must’ve felt when Vic suddenly disappeared from his life.
About how he probably didn’t even get to say goodbye. One evening, I found myself standing outside Imelda’s place again. I had a photo album in my hand—pictures of Vic from our travels, our wedding, his goofy side.
I didn’t plan to stay long. “I thought Mateo might want to see some of these,” I said. She invited me in without hesitation.
Mateo looked up from his book and blinked at me. “You’re Papa’s wife,” he said matter-of-factly. “I am,” I replied, heart clenching.
He was shy at first, but as I flipped through the album, he pointed to a picture of Vic in a ridiculous Christmas sweater. “He wore that last year when we made cookies,” he said, smiling. We talked for an hour.
Then two. It became a routine. Every Thursday, I’d bring over more photos, stories, little mementos.
Imelda was always gracious, never pushing. And Mateo—he slowly started to open up. One night, he asked me if Vic ever read to me.
“All the time,” I said. “He did all the voices, too.”
Mateo giggled. “He did that for me, too.
Especially the pirates.”
The bond was unspoken but growing. Then came the twist I never saw coming. Imelda called me one morning in tears.
Mateo had gotten into an argument at school. Another kid had said something cruel—called him a “mistake.” Mateo had shouted back, “At least I had a real dad!” and then stormed out. I drove over immediately.
Mateo was in his room, red-eyed and angry. I knocked gently. “Can I come in?” I asked.
He nodded without looking at me. “You miss him,” I said. He nodded again.
“I do too. Every day.”
There was a long pause. Then he whispered, “I didn’t get to say goodbye.”
I sat down beside him.
“Neither did I.”
And we just sat there, holding the silence like a thread between us. That’s when I made a decision that surprised even me. I told Imelda I wanted to help.
Not just with the garage or the memories—but with Mateo. Really help. “I’m not trying to take your place,” I told her.
“Or confuse him. But if there’s room… I’d like to be in his life.”
She was quiet for a long time. Then she said, “There’s room.”
So we made it work.
Slowly. We cleaned out the garage together. Turned it into a reading nook and art space.
Mateo painted a mural on the wall—half ocean, half stars. Said it reminded him of Papa. We started doing Sunday dinners.
Just the three of us. Sometimes awkward, sometimes loud, always real. One evening, as I was tucking him in after a movie night, Mateo looked up and said, “Do you think Papa would be happy we’re still hanging out?”
I smiled and kissed his forehead.
“I think he’d be proud of both of us.”
And I meant it. Grief doesn’t come with a map. Neither does forgiveness.
But sometimes, the road winds somewhere better than you expected. If I’d never found that garage door opener, I would’ve missed out on a boy who carries pieces of Vic’s heart—and mine. And I realized: sometimes the people we lose leave behind more than pain.
Sometimes, they leave behind unfinished stories. And if we’re brave enough, we can pick up the pen. If this touched you, or reminded you of someone you’ve loved and lost—share it.
Someone else might need to hear it too. 💛
