My brother left the house for prom night and never returned. Twenty-three years passed with no answers, no explanations, no ending. Then, three thousand miles away, I looked into the eyes of a teenage stranger who had his exact face. What would you do if the past looked back at you?
The suit had taken my mother four months to afford.
She had been checking prices since February, quietly putting aside little pieces of the grocery money without telling any of us.
I did not learn until years later, long after that night had become the weight our carried forever, that she had gone without a winter coat that year so she could buy it for him.
I still remember standing at the foot of the stairs on the evening Daniel came down wearing it.He was 17, newly tall in a body he had only just grown into, his hair combed back in a style he had obviously practiced more than once in the bathroom mirror.
You look so handsome,” she said.
“Thanks, Mom,” he grinned, fixing his collar while checking himself in the hallway mirror.
“Don’t wait up,” he added, the way he always did, a little joke between them that neither of them truly meant.
He laughed.Some doors, she told me once, standing in that doorway with her hand resting on the frame, don’t need to stay closed forever. They just need someone, eventually, to find their way back through them.
So this is the question I still cannot answer cleanly, the one I turn over most nights even now: if someone you loved vanished to protect you from a danger you never even knew existed, would you forgive the silence completely — or would all the years of waiting always remain somewhere between you, no matter how gently the story finally came home?
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