He didn’t come to steal my son’s place. He came because he’d been standing beside him on that ledge, a terrified kid trying to impress older boys, and he’d run when the world cracked. My son slipped. The others vanished into their own lives. Only he stayed trapped there, on that rock above the quarry, replaying the moment until it poisoned everything. Prison hadn’t been his real sentence. Guilt had.
When he finally spoke, it shattered the story I’d built just to stay alive. But beneath the horror was something I never expected: an answer. A witness. A boy who’d grown into a man still carrying my child with him. I could have chosen anger. Instead, I chose to set us both down. I told him my son deserved peace—and so did he. When I pulled him into a trembling hug, it didn’t erase the past. It simply meant that, after fifteen years of not knowing, love was louder than the fall.
