Forty years ago, my husband left to buy milk and disappeared. Just as I had begun to lose hope, a mysterious letter arrived, urging me to go to the railway station. There he was, aged and trembling, with a story so impossible that it would change everything.
The morning sunlight poured through the windows, spilling golden warmth onto the kitchen table.
I stood by the sink, humming as Michael wrapped his arms around my waist.
“Good morning, beautiful,” he said, kissing my temple.
“Good morning, charmer,” I replied, swatting him playfully with the dish towel.
Our four-year-old son, Benjamin, was building a tower with his blocks in the living room. “Dad! Look at this!” he shouted as his hazel eyes, the same as mine, lit up with pride.
Life was simple, and it was good.
“Do we need anything from the store?” Michael asked as he handed Dorothy to me.
“Just milk,” I said.
“But I can go later.”
“Nonsense.
I’ll grab it now,” he replied, grabbing his jacket.
That was the last time I saw him.
At first, I wasn’t worried. Maybe he’d run into a neighbor or decided to pick up a few extras.
But unease crept in as an hour turned into two, and two turned into evening.
I called the store, my voice trembling.
“Hi, has anyone seen my husband?”
The clerk’s response hit me like a brick. “No, ma’am.
Haven’t seen him today.”
I called neighbors, friends, and even his boss. No one had seen him.
By nightfall, I was pacing the living room, my heart racing.
Benjamin tugged on my sleeve.
“Where’s Dad?”
“I… I don’t know, sweetheart,” I said, kneeling to his level.
“Did he get lost?” Benjamin asked, his voice small.
“No, baby. Daddy knows his way,” I said, trying to sound confident. But inside, panic clawed at my chest.
The police came the next morning.
They asked questions, took notes, and promised to “look into it.”
“Was your husband under any stress?” one officer asked.
“No!” I snapped, then softened.
“We were happy. He loved us.”
Days turned into weeks, and still, nothing.
I plastered missing posters on every lamppost and storefront.
“Have you seen this man?” I asked strangers on the street.
Benjamin clung to my side, his wide eyes scanning every crowd.
Dorothy, too young to understand, babbled, “Da-da?”
Months passed. The whispers started.
“Maybe he ran off,” a neighbor murmured.
“Maybe she drove him away,” another said.
I clenched my fists.
What happened next changed everything… continues on the next page.
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