I buried my son 15 years ago.
His name was Howard. He was four years old. Too small for a coffin. Too small for the weight of that day.
They told me it was a sudden infection. Fast. Rare. The kind of thing that turns before anyone can stop it.
I just knew my son was gone.
I remember signing forms through tears. I remember a nurse resting her hand on my shoulder and saying, “Don’t look too long. It’s better to remember him as he was.”
So I listened.
Because I was wrecked. Because the ward was chaos that night. A storm had knocked out part of the hospital’s system, and everything had fallen back to paper charts, tired hands, and people trusting whatever wristband they saw first.
I didn’t know that then.
Howard had a birthmark just below his left ear.
A few years later, I moved to a different town and took a job at a café where nobody knew me as the woman who lost a child. I made drinks. Cleaned counters. Learned how to keep going without calling it healing.
But some things never left me.
That birthmark. Small. Oval. Uneven at the edges. I used to kiss it every night before bed.
I had not let myself think about that mark in years.
Until yesterday.
It was a normal rush. Loud. Busy. Orders piling up.
Then a young man stepped up to the counter.
“Just a black coffee,” he said.

Nineteen, maybe twenty. Dark hair. Tired face. Nothing unusual.
I turned to make the drink, and he tilted his head.
For a second, I couldn’t breathe.
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