Nathan’s first instinct was to dismiss it as a trick of the light or his own imagination playing games with him. But as he stood there, rooted to the spot, he realized that the glow was steady. It flickered slightly, as though a candle or a small lamp was burning inside. His curiosity piqued, Nathan decided to investigate further. He pushed open the door, which groaned on its rusty hinges, and stepped inside.
The air inside was musty, filled with the scent of dust and time. But as Nathan moved further in, another scent, something more familiar, began to unfurl around him—a hint of lavender, Evelyn’s favorite. His heart clenched painfully, a reminder of a past he thought he’d buried beneath layers of ambition and wealth. As he walked through the dim hallway, memories resurfaced with each creak of the floorboards.
Suddenly, he heard a soft humming coming from the direction of the living room. It was a melody he remembered well. His breath caught in his throat as he moved toward the sound, his mind racing with possibilities. Could it be…? No, it couldn’t. Evelyn was gone. He had seen her body, attended her funeral. Yet the melody was unmistakably hers.
Nathan paused at the doorway to the living room, his hand poised on the frame to steady himself against the whirlwind of emotions. And there, in the soft glow of a table lamp, sat Evelyn. She looked just as he remembered her, though perhaps a little older, as if time had added its subtle touches in his absence. And beside her, playing quietly with a set of well-worn toys, was a young boy who looked uncannily like Nathan himself at that age.
“Evelyn?” His voice came out as a croak, disbelief mingled with hope.
She turned to face him, her eyes meeting his with a calm serenity that belied the chaos within him. “Hello, Nathan,” she said softly, as though they had parted just yesterday.
Nathan stumbled into the room, his briefcase forgotten by the door. “How… how is this possible?” he stammered, his gaze shifting between his wife and the child who could only be his son.
Evelyn smiled, a sad, knowing smile. “It’s a long story, one that your mother never wanted you to hear.”
“My mother?” Nathan was reeling. His mother had passed away a year after Evelyn, never mentioning anything about Evelyn’s survival or a child. “I don’t understand.”
Evelyn gestured for him to sit. “After the accident, I was taken to a private hospital. Your mother arranged everything. She thought it was for the best, to protect us. She was afraid, Nathan. Afraid that your enemies would use us against you as you climbed higher in the business world.”
Nathan felt the room sway. His mother had always been protective to a fault, but this… this was beyond anything he could have imagined. “Why now?” he managed to ask, his eyes misting with unshed tears. “Why show yourself to me now?”
“Because it’s time,” Evelyn replied gently. “Your mother is gone, and I can’t hide in the shadows any longer. Our son deserves to know his father.”
The boy looked up then, his innocent eyes meeting Nathan’s with a mixture of curiosity and apprehension. “Daddy?” he said tentatively.
Nathan’s heart shattered and mended all at once. He crossed the room in two strides, dropping to his knees before his son. “Yes, buddy,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “I’m here.”
In that moment, as his son wrapped small arms around his neck and Evelyn watched with tears glistening in her eyes, Nathan realized that the wealth he had amassed meant nothing without the family he had always thought lost. The truth, buried for years, was finally uncovered. And with it came a second chance. READ MORE BELOW