He glanced behind me, then back at my face. “I—I didn’t think I’d ever see you again.”
“That was your choice,” I said.
His eyes filled with something like regret. “I made a mistake.”

I almost laughed.
Before I could respond, a woman approached, holding a stack of papers.
“Adam,” she snapped. “Did you sign these yet? We’re already late.”
She noticed me, frowned. “Who’s this?”
He hesitated.
“My ex-wife.”
Her expression shifted—recognition dawning, then discomfort.
“Oh,” she said quietly.
That’s when three voices called out from the end of the aisle.
“Mom!”
Amara, Andy, and Ashton walked toward us, tall and confident, backpacks slung over their shoulders.
Adam’s face drained of color.
“Are those—?” he whispered.
“Yes,” I said. “Your children.”
He stared at them, jaw trembling. “I—I didn’t think—”
“That they’d grow up?” I asked. “That we’d survive without you?”
The woman beside him stepped back slowly. “You never told me you had kids.”
“I didn’t,” she added, eyes narrowing. “Especially not three.”
Adam opened his mouth, but nothing came out.
For the first time, he had nowhere to run.
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