My son, Ethan, arrived when I was twenty-four. His father, Ryan, had vanished the same night I told him I was expecting. One evening he was smiling, promising he’d “be back soon,” and the next morning he was simply gone. He left behind a silver bracelet with his initials, a few clothes, and a space in my future I didn’t know how to fill.
Ethan often asked about his dad. I always answered gently: “He’s out there somewhere. Maybe one day we’ll understand what happened.” It wasn’t a promise—I didn’t have the right to make one—but it was hope.
And hope has a quiet way of surviving.
The Day the Cars Arrived
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