I stood there, staring at him, trying to match the boy I had raised with the man in front of me who looked at me like a stranger. My chest tightened with every second he didn’t say my name.
“Ethan,” I said again, softer now, as if saying it gently might bring him back. “Look at me. Please.”
He did.
Really looked this time.
His eyes moved across my face slowly, like he was searching for something buried deep inside himself. For a brief moment, something flickered there, something fragile and uncertain.
Then it was gone.
“I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “I don’t remember you.”
The words knocked the air out of me.
I shook my head, stepping closer. “You used to hate thunderstorms,” I said quickly. “You’d come into my room and pretend you weren’t scared. You’d just stand there until I lifted the blanket.” My voice trembled. “You always left your socks everywhere. I used to yell at you about it.”
His brows furrowed slightly.
I saw it again… that flicker.
“You had a scar on your knee from when you fell off your bike when you were nine,” I continued, my hands shaking now. “You cried for an hour, and I had to carry you inside.”
He swallowed.
“I…” He pressed his fingers to his temple, wincing. “I don’t—”
“Daniel,” the woman cut in, her voice tense. “You don’t need to listen to this.”
“I do,” he said, more firmly this time, though his voice was unsteady. “Something about this feels… off.”
My heart pounded harder.
“Fourteen years ago,” I said, forcing the words out through my shaking breath, “you disappeared. No note. No call. Nothing. I searched everywhere for you. I never stopped.”
He looked at me, confusion deepening in his eyes. “That doesn’t make sense,” he said slowly. “I’ve lived here for years. With her.”
“With her?” I echoed, glancing at the woman.
She straightened, her expression guarded. “He was found,” she said after a pause. “Injured. On the side of the road. He didn’t remember anything. No name. No past.”
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