It looked like the door of someone ordinary.
Too ordinary to have been present in his life for eighteen years without him knowing.
He knocked.
It took a while.
When the door opened, an older man stood there, gray-haired, hands worn by decades of work.
He stared at Ethan in silence.
Then his eyes dropped to the watch on Ethan’s wrist.
He closed his eyes.
Like he’d been waiting for this moment for a long time.
“I knew you’d come someday,” the man said finally.
Ethan felt his heartbeat in his ears.
“Was it you… who sent the gifts?”
The man nodded.
He didn’t smile.
He didn’t look proud.
He looked… relieved.
“I didn’t help you,” he said calmly. “I kept a promise to your mother.”
Ethan couldn’t speak.
“Many years ago,” the man continued, “I wasn’t a good person. I got into serious trouble. One night, I ended up hurt—alone—convinced nobody would stop to help.”
He paused.
“Your mother was the only one who did.”
Ethan felt the air change.
“She didn’t ask who I was. She didn’t ask what I’d done. She just got me to a hospital… and stayed until I was safe.”
“And then?” Ethan whispered.
“Then she disappeared. She wouldn’t take anything from me. She only said one thing—”
The man looked Ethan straight in the eyes.