THE FACE IN THE WALLET
A young woman. Dark hair. Bright eyes. A smile wide enough to stop traffic.
Margaret’s hand froze midair.
The blood drained from her face so fast she swayed.
“No,” she whispered.
The man frowned. “Are you alright?”
She wasn’t listening.
Her eyes were locked on that photo as if it had just climbed out of a grave.
“Why,” she said, her voice splitting down the middle, “do you have my daughter’s picture in your wallet?”
“THAT’S MY WIFE.”
The man instinctively pulled the wallet closer to his chest.
“Excuse me?”
“My daughter,” Margaret said. The coins in her cup rattled as her hands shook. “Emily. That’s Emily.”
“Ma’am,” he said carefully, “this is my wife.”
“Your wife is dead!” Margaret’s voice broke open. Heads turned across the street. “She died five years ago. The police told me—”
“Stop.” He raised his hand, trying to hold onto composure. “My wife is alive. I had breakfast with her this morning.”
Margaret’s body folded inward as sobs tore through her—loud, unfiltered, years of grief collapsing at once.
“A mother knows her child’s face,” she choked. “I carried her. I raised her. I buried an empty casket because they never found her body.”
THE DETAILS NO STRANGER COULD KNOW
The man went still.
“Emily Richards,” Margaret said. “Born March 14th, 1994. Scar on her left knee from falling off a bike at seven. Birthmark shaped like a crescent moon behind her right ear.”
The man’s face went white.
Because his wife had that scar.
And that birthmark.
“This isn’t possible,” he said.
“Show me your phone,” Margaret demanded.
He hesitated—then scrolled.
A beach. Wind in her hair. Sunglasses on her head. Laughing.
Margaret grabbed the phone with both hands.
The sound that came out of her wasn’t quite human.
“That’s her,” she sobbed. “Oh God… that’s my baby.”
DANIEL’S WORLD TILTS
His name was Daniel Porter.
Thirty-four. Consulting partner. Married two years. A man who thought he knew the structure of his life.
He sat down on the freezing sidewalk beside a homeless woman and felt it tilt sideways.
“She told me she had no family,” he said quietly.
Margaret wiped her face. “That’s a lie.”
“She said her parents died in a car accident. Foster care. No relatives.”
“That’s not true,” Margaret said. “Not one word.”
Daniel pressed his palms to his eyes.
“I know.”
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