I’m 35, and that morning I woke up with the rare feeling that life had finally settled. Not perfect. Not flashy. Just steady. Normal. Safe.
Jessica was still asleep when I got up. She’d wrapped herself into a burrito of blankets, hair a tangled mess on the pillow, one leg sticking out like she’d fought the comforter and lost.
The scent of coffee and eggs got her moving anyway. She blinked up at me, face still half-buried in the pillow.
That was it. That was the whole plan. A quiet Saturday morning where the biggest crisis was choosing the right kind of deli meat.
I threw on jeans and a sweatshirt, grabbed my keys from the hook by the door, and headed to the grocery store we always went to—same aisles, same fluorescent lighting, same little routine that made life feel predictable.
Bread.
I was in line at checkout, basket balanced against my hip, already thinking about how quickly I could get back home, when a child’s voice sliced through the noise of scanners and plastic bags like it was amplified.
“Mom! Look! That man looks exactly like Dad!”
I froze so hard it felt like my bones locked.
At first, I tried to shrug it off. Kids say things. They confuse people. They make wild comparisons. But this wasn’t random. Behind me stood a woman and a little boy, maybe seven. The boy stared at me with wide, unblinking eyes—pure recognition, the kind that doesn’t need proof.
But the woman—
Her entire body went stiff.
Her face drained so quickly it was like someone had pulled the color out of her. She looked like she’d seen someone walk out of a grave.