I remember the day they told me Ron was gone.
It didn’t feel real. Nothing about it made sense. One moment, he was here, and the next, I was standing in a hospital hallway being told there had been an accident.
They said he lost control of the car and crashed into a ditch.
I was eight months pregnant at the time.
I don’t remember much from those days. Just pieces. People talking. Papers to sign. The sound of my own breathing feeling too loud in my ears.
The grief hit me so hard that I lost the baby too.
In a single moment, I lost everything.
They buried Ron in a closed casket. Next to our unborn child.
I didn’t question it. I couldn’t. I didn’t have the strength to ask anything, to doubt anything. I just accepted what I was told because it was already too much to survive.
After that, I left.
I moved to another city, far from everything that reminded me of that life. I found a job, built a routine, and did my best to exist without looking back.
Three years passed like that.
Quiet. Empty. Controlled.
Until last Sunday.
I heard noise coming from the hallway. Loud dragging, boxes being moved, doors opening and closing. Someone new was moving in next door.
I looked through the window and saw them.
A man. A woman. A little girl.
For a second, I just stood there watching.
It was the kind of scene that used to belong to me.
And then the man looked up.
My heart stopped.
He looked exactly like Ron.
Not similar.
Not close.
Exact.
Same hair. Same eyes. Same way of holding himself.
It felt like my body forgot how to move.
A few minutes later, I heard footsteps coming up the stairs. The man and the little girl reached my floor.
They were moving into the apartment right next to mine.
I didn’t think.
I opened my door.
He turned toward me, and for a moment, I couldn’t breathe.
It was like looking at a ghost.
“Excuse me…” I said, my voice shaking. “This might sound strange, but do you know someone named Ron?”
He didn’t hesitate.
“No,” he said quickly.
Then he picked up the little girl and said, “Katie, let’s go home.”
I froze.
Katie.
My name.
Out of all the names in the world.
I stepped closer, my heart racing so hard it hurt.
“I’m sorry,” I said, trying to steady myself. “You just… you look exactly like someone I used to know.”
He moved to close the door.
And that’s when I saw it.
His hand.
Two fingers missing.
The same two fingers Ron lost when he was a child.
It wasn’t possible.
It couldn’t be.
But it was right there in front of me.
“Ron…” I whispered, my voice breaking. “Is that really you?”
He stopped.
For a second, he didn’t move at all.
Then he looked at me.
And in his eyes, I saw something I wasn’t prepared for.
Not confusion.
Not anger.
Something else.
Something heavier.
And what he said next…
made everything I believed fall apart.