“…Elena,” she said.
The man staggered back half a step like the name had hit him in the chest.
His wife’s name.
The name on the gravestone.
The name he had whispered into empty rooms for seven years.
He stared at the little girl, at her dark hair tied back, at the pink cardigan, at the red bucket hanging from her trembling hand.
“How old are you?” he asked.
“Six.”
His breathing turned uneven.
Elena had died eight years ago.
Or at least…
that was what they told him.
The girl pointed toward the playground.
“She’s over there.”
He turned so fast it almost looked painful.
Near the swings, a woman stood with her back to them, one hand resting on the chain, the other holding a paper bag from a bakery.
Simple clothes.
Soft posture.
Dark hair caught by the wind.
His whole body went cold.
“No…” he whispered, but his feet were already moving.
The girl followed, confused now, trying to keep up.
The woman turned at the sound of footsteps.
And the paper bag slipped from her hands.
Croissants scattered across the grass.
For one long, unreal second, neither of them spoke.
His lips trembled first.
“Elena?”
Her face crumpled instantly.
Not from confusion.
From recognition.
From guilt.
From years.
She covered her mouth as tears filled her eyes.
The little girl looked between them.
“Mama?”
The man stopped just a few feet away.
He was shaking so hard he could barely hold the wallet.
“They told me you were dead.”
Elena let out a broken breath.
“My father told me you left us.”
The words landed between them like another loss.
The little girl’s eyes widened.
“Us?”
Elena dropped to her knees and pulled her daughter close, but she never looked away from him.
Her voice cracked.
“The night I gave birth, my father took her. He said you were gone. He said if I tried to find you, he’d make sure I never saw her again.”
The man’s eyes filled.
He looked at the little girl.
Then back at Elena.
“She’s my daughter?”
Elena nodded through tears.
“I found her two months ago.”
The little girl’s tiny fingers curled into her mother’s sleeve.
The man made a sound that was almost a laugh, almost a sob.
Seven years of grief.
Six years of a daughter he never knew existed.
A wife he buried in his heart while she was still alive.
He stepped closer, then stopped, as if afraid one more step would wake him from the dream.
The girl looked up at Elena.
Then at him.
In a tiny voice, she asked the question neither of them had the strength to say first.
“Are you my dad?”
He dropped to his knees on the grass.
His face broke completely.
“Yes,” he whispered.
And when the little girl ran into his arms, he held her like a man trying to gather back every stolen year before they disappeared again.