Yesterday, in an Italian resort café, I heard my dead wife’s laugh before I saw her face. Sarah was alive, wearing sunglasses, and holding my worst enemy’s hand. I had spent three years teaching our daughter to kiss an empty photo goodnight. Then Sarah looked at the diaper bag and stopped smiling.
The laugh came from the café before I reached the door.
I had not heard it in three years, except in the wrong places.
I had not heard it in three years.
At 4 a.m. while rocking our daughter.
In the grocery aisle when a stranger bent over the tomatoes.
At the cemetery, once, while a woman behind me answered her phone and laughed exactly the way Sarah used to laugh.
Yesterday, the sound came from a table under a striped awning in Portofino, Italy.
The sound came from a table under a striped awning.
I stopped beside the glass display of pastries with a small wrapped box in my hand. Inside was a wooden music toy for Lily’s third birthday.
Lily was back at the resort with her nanny, supposedly teaching her stuffed rabbit Italian.
I had stepped out for 15 minutes.
That was how long it took for my dead wife to return.
I had stepped out for 15 minutes.
Sarah sat near the window wearing cream linen and dark sunglasses.
Her hair was shorter.
A burn scar touched the left side of her cheek. One hand rested on the table beside an untouched espresso.
The other hand was inside Marcus’s.
My worst enemy.
A burn scar touched the left side of her cheek.
While I was still ordering flowers for an empty grave, he was busy gutting my company, later telling investors I had become “emotionally unreliable” a mere two weeks after Sarah’s funeral.
In one calculated sweep, Marcus took my clients, my trust, and whatever fragile part of my pride grief had not already ruined.
Marcus saw me first.
His face did not change the way I expected.
Marcus saw me first.
No smugness.
No fear.
Only a quick, controlled stillness.
Sarah followed his gaze.
She lowered her sunglasses.
For one second, I watched her become a ghost seeing me.
Sarah followed his gaze.
Then her eyes dropped.
Not to my face.
Not to the box in my hand.
To the diaper bag on my shoulder, where Lily’s tiny knitted yellow duck poked out of the side pocket.
Sarah’s fingers lifted toward it.
Barely.
Then stopped.
Then her eyes dropped.
“Sarah,” I breathed. “Is that you?”
Her lips parted.
She looked at the duck again.
“Please,” she whispered. “Not here.”
“Sarah, is that you?”
Something colder than anger settled over me.
“Then tell me where.”
Marcus stood first.
I looked at his hand leaving hers.
“Don’t you dare speak,” I roared.
He nodded once.
That made me hate him more.
I looked at his hand leaving hers.
Sarah moved to stand and gripped the edge of the table. Marcus shifted as if to help, then stopped when I looked at him.
She noticed.
The café had an upstairs terrace closed for the afternoon.
Marcus spoke briefly to the owner. Money changed nothing visible, but the terrace doors opened.
She noticed.
***
We climbed the stairs in silence.
Sarah went slowly.
I noticed her left foot dragged when she was tired.
I did not want to notice.
At the top, the sea spread beyond the railing, bright enough to look cruel.
Sarah sat.
Marcus remained standing.
I did not sit at all.
I did not want to notice.
“Where is she?” Sarah asked.
The question came before the apology.
“Where is my daughter, Harry?”
I had carried three years of grief toward a woman I thought no longer existed. That one question did not erase it.
I had carried three years of grief.
“At the resort,” I said. “With her nanny.”
Sarah pressed her fingers flat against the table.
“Is she fine?”
“She is three.”
“Is she happy?”
“She asks why her mother lives in photographs.”
Sarah looked down.
Marcus turned toward the water.
“She asks why her mother lives in photographs.”
For a moment, none of us belonged to the same world.
Then I placed the wrapped toy on the table.
“Start talking.”
Sarah looked at Marcus.
“Not him,” I said. “You.”
“I remember the rain,” she began. “The road. The tires sliding. I remember water coming through the window.”
“I remember the rain.”
I knew that part.
I had lived inside that part for three years.
Police had shown me photographs of the wreckage. A city in Italy. We were there on vacation. Sarah had driven out that night to visit a friend. That’s what she told me.
The guardrail torn open. Her purse found against a rock. One shoe. Enough blood in the car for the detective to stop using hopeful language.
Sarah had driven out that night to visit a friend.
But no body.
That was the part I had built prayers around until the prayers became useless.
“I woke up in a hospital,” Sarah said. “I didn’t know who I was.”
“I couldn’t speak properly. I couldn’t remember names. I didn’t remember Lily.” She stared at me. “I didn’t remember you.”
“I didn’t know who I was.”
Her hand went to her cheek.
The burn scar.
I kept my eyes on it.
“Convenient,” I muttered.
“It sounds that way.”
I kept my eyes on it.
She kept talking.
“The hospital found Marcus through company records. His name was listed on the Italian expansion documents.”
“He flew here.”
“Yes.”
“He found you alive.”
“Yes.”
“And I buried an empty coffin.”
Her hands folded together.
“I did not know that then.”
“He found you alive.”
“When did you know?”
She did not answer quickly enough.
The sea moved below us, hitting stone again and again.
“When did you know, Sarah?”
“Months later.”
“When did you know?”
I sat then, not because I wanted to, but because standing gave my body too many ways to betray me.
“And after the months?”
Sarah looked past me toward the closed terrace doors.
A child laughed somewhere downstairs.
She did not look toward the sound.
Marcus did.
I noticed that too.
“And after the months?”
“After the months,” she said, “I booked a flight.”
“When?”
“September.”
“You disappeared in March.”
“I know.”
“Then you came home in September.”
Her eyes stayed on the table.
“No.”
I waited.