David.
My David.
Dead twelve years this month.
I stood there in my nightgown and slippers, staring at this broken stranger who claimed to know my son. Who claimed he’d been there when David died.
The Army told me my son had died instantly in an IED explosion. That he hadn’t suffered. That was all they ever told me.
The biker groaned softly and shifted. Fresh blood seeped from somewhere beneath his vest.
He was badly hurt.
But the note said no hospital.
I made a decision that went against every logical instinct I had.
I went inside, grabbed blankets and my first-aid kit, and returned to the porch. Then I sat beside a stranger and began cleaning his wounds.
He woke when I pressed antiseptic to the gash on his forehead.
“Mrs. Chen?” His voice was hoarse. Fragile. “Is it really you?”
