No blank space.
Just three people.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” he asked.
He regretted it the moment he said it.
Emma gave a bitter laugh.
“I found out I was pregnant three weeks after I left.”
Nathan closed his eyes.
“At first,” she said, “I thought maybe it meant we had one more chance.”
She paused.
“Then I remembered what you said the night we ended.”
Nathan felt sick before she even repeated it.
“You said you never wanted children.”
He lowered his head.
“You didn’t say you were scared. You didn’t say you needed time. You said never.”
“I was a fool.”
“No,” Emma said quietly. “You were honest.”
Then she told him everything.
The dangerous pregnancy.
The twin-to-twin transfusion.
The surgery before birth.
The months in the neonatal intensive care unit.
The hospital bills.
The fear.
The nights spent praying beside incubators.
Nathan sat without moving.
“I didn’t know,” he whispered.
Emma’s eyes filled with tears.
“You didn’t ask.”
That sentence broke him.
Because it was true.
She had not vanished.
She had not left the country.
She had been in the same city the entire time, raising his sons alone while he chased skyscrapers and headlines.
“Let me pay the debt,” he said.
“No.”
“Please, Emma.”
“This isn’t just a bill, Nathan.”
“Then tell me what I can do.”
Emma looked at him for a long time.
“For once in your life?”
She paused.
“Do nothing fast.”
PART 3
After a long silence, Emma finally spoke again.
“You can see them.”
Nathan looked up.
“Five minutes.”
His heart nearly stopped.
“But they’re asleep,” she said.
He nodded.
“And you don’t speak.”
The boys’ room was softly lit by a moon-shaped nightlight.
Ethan slept sideways across the bed.
Noah held a stuffed dinosaur against his chest.
They were real.
Not an accident.
Not a consequence.
His sons.
Nathan dropped to one knee.
Ethan had the same cowlick Nathan had as a child.
Noah had Emma’s long fingers.
Their small chests rose and fell beneath superhero blankets.
“Do they ask about me?” Nathan whispered.
“They used to.”
The answer hurt deeply.
“What did you tell them?”
“That their father lived far away.”
He deserved worse.
“And now?”
Emma looked away.
“Now they ask less.”
When they returned to the living room, Nathan stood near the door, unable to move closer.
“I want to earn whatever place you allow me to have.”
Emma looked exhausted.
“The science fair is Thursday.”
He listened carefully.
“The boys will be there.”
His heart started racing.
“You may come.”
A pause.
“But not as their father.”
Nathan nodded.
“No gifts.”
Another nod.
“No photos.”
“I understand.”
Emma sighed.
“No, you don’t.”
She opened the door.
“But maybe you can learn.”
For the first time in five years, Nathan Harrison left with something far more valuable than any contract he had ever signed.
Hope.
A small, fragile chance to become the father he should have been from the beginning.
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