We sat at my kitchen table like strangers who shared a secret neither of us understood yet. I poured coffee out of habit.
He kept staring at his hands.
“I don’t even know where to start,” he said.
“Start with the fire,” I replied. “Start with why we buried you.”
His jaw tightened. He nodded once.
“It wasn’t an accident.”
The words landed heavy in the room.
“Start with the fire.”
“What do you mean it wasn’t an accident?” My voice came out sharper than I meant it to. “The report —”
“My mother controlled the report.” He swallowed. “The fireplace story. Dental records. All of it…They wanted me to get away from you, Sammie. They said you were beneath us.”
I shook my head slowly. “You’re telling me that they faked your death?”
“Yes.”
The kitchen felt smaller.
“How?” I asked. “There was a body, Gabe.”
He nodded. “There was a fire, and I was there. There were remains. But not mine. They identified it through dental records that could be… redirected. My parents got me out, but I did get burned in the process.”
My voice came out sharper.
I leaned back in my chair. “That’s not just manipulation…”
“I know, Sammie.”
“You let me think you were dead,” I said quietly.
**
My father, Neville, had never trusted the closed casket. He didn’t say it out loud, but I saw it in the way he watched Gabriel’s parents, Camille and Louis, at the funeral.
Afterward, he kept me busy at the shop, kept food on my plate, and kept my hands moving so my mind couldn’t drown.
When I married Connor, he didn’t smile in the photos. He hugged me and whispered, “You deserve real love, kid.” I thought he meant Connor.
Now I wondered if he meant Gabriel — and if he’d been carrying a secret he couldn’t put down.
“You let me think you were dead.”
**
“After the fire, I had… post-traumatic amnesia,” Gabriel said. “That’s what the doctors in Switzerland called it. Smoke inhalation. Burns. They said my brain… it went into survival mode.”
I clenched my fists together.
“Tell me what you came for,” I said.
He looked up. His gaze was steady now, even through the tears.
“I came because I finally got control of my records,” he said. “I came because my mother can’t stop me anymore.”
My heart stuttered.
**
“I had… post-traumatic amnesia.”
We spent hours in that kitchen, unspooling the threads of our lives.
He talked about days lost to pain, to foggy memories, to the ache of being erased. I told him about my wedding — how my ex-husband never knew the real me.
I confessed to lying awake at night, wondering if forgiveness was something you had to ask for.
“Does anyone else know?” I asked him.
He shook his head. “Just you. And my mother, of course. She needs to know where I am. I need your help.”
**
“Does anyone else know?”
The next day, I was collecting my mail when Mrs. Harlan from the HOA caught me at the curb.
“Morning, Sammie,” she said, smiling too hard. “Your new neighbor seems… intense.”
Before I could answer, a sleek black sedan rolled up. Camille stepped out.
“Elias,” she called, warm and loud enough for the cul-de-sac to hear. “Sweetheart. I just came to check up on you.”
Gabriel came out of his house, shoulders tight. Camille’s eyes slid to me.
“Sammie, dear… I’m so sorry. He’s been recovering for years. Grief can do strange thing — especially when someone resembles a memory.”
“I know who he really is, Camille.”
“Your new neighbor seems… intense.”
Mrs. Harlan’s smile vanished. Camille held her smile, but her gaze sharpened.
“I only want what’s best for him,” she said sweetly. “For Elias’s health, keep your distance — or the paperwork will come and he will vanish.”
Gabriel’s jaw flexed. “Stop talking about me like I’m not standing here.”
**
A week passed.
Gabe and I kept our conversations private, sitting on my back porch where nobody could see. He was careful — until a black sedan idled at the corner, lights off, engine ticking. We knew Camille was watching us.
“I only want what’s best for him.”
One day, he brought me an old photograph, one we’d taken in his basement just before the fire. We were grinning, arms around each other, the matching tattoos on our forearms.
A matching infinity symbol — because we wanted to last forever.
“I kept this,” he said, voice soft. “It was the only thing that was mine. They took everything else. I didn’t know who you were for a long time because of the amnesia.”
“I don’t know what to say, Gabriel.”
“There were days I’d remember flashes — your laugh, the garage, the tattoo. Then they’d switch doctors, change the rules, tighten access. I’d lose ground again. This photo kept me going.”
“They took everything else.”
I took the photo, tracing the edges with my thumb.
I looked at him, searching his face for the boy I loved. “Did you ever try to run?”
He nodded.
“The first year, I tried twice. They found me both times. After that, I was always watched. Even as an adult, someone was always there — a nurse, a caregiver, someone from the family.”
A lump rose in my throat.
“And you just… accepted it?”
“I stopped fighting when they told me you were married.”
“Did you ever try to run?”
“Gabe, you need to stop living under her thumb. It’s been 30 years of this nonsense.”
He shook his head, rubbing the scar on his arm. “You don’t know Camille, Sammie. She’s gotten worse than you remember. She has lawyers, money, connections everywhere. She’s been controlling everything for so long, I —”
I reached across the table. “Then let’s fight. Together.”
He looked at me, uncertain. “Fight how? She has everything. My father is dead, and he was starting to understand…”
“She doesn’t have everything,” I said. “She doesn’t have the truth. And she doesn’t have us working together. Gabe, you’re not Elias. You’re Gabriel. Stop letting her decide who you are.”
I looked at the taut, burned skin on his forearm.
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