He sat in the chair by the window while I drank water with shaking hands.
“I keep thinking I’m dying again,” I admitted.
He nodded. “Your body remembers. It takes time for the mind to catch up and believe the danger is over.”
“Does it?”
“Most days.”
I looked at him.
“And on the other days?”
He smiled sadly.
“On the other days, you find someone safe to sit with you until morning.”
So he did.
He sat in the chair while dawn unfolded pale and gold behind the curtains.
Neither of us said much.
It was enough that he stayed.
The DNA results came on a Thursday.
Gerald had driven me to my follow-up appointment, where Dr. Reeves removed two staples and declared me “stubbornly alive.” Afterward, we stopped at a bakery because Gerald insisted medical trauma required cinnamon rolls.
When we returned to his house, the envelope was in the mailbox.
White.
Plain.
Impossible.
Gerald saw it before I did.
He froze with his hand inside the mailbox.
“Is that it?” I asked.
He nodded.
We carried it inside like it might explode.
For several minutes, we sat at the kitchen table staring at the envelope between us.
“You open it,” Gerald said.
“No. You.”
“Holly, I’ve waited twenty-six years. I can wait another minute.”