Part 2: My whole body went cold.

I hadn’t heard anyone call her “real mom” before. Not once. Not ever.

I knelt in front of her and asked where she got the ring.

She pointed again at the tent, but when I turned around, the fortune-teller’s lights were already off.

The line was gone.
The music around us felt far away.
Even the laughter sounded wrong.

“She knew my name,” my daughter whispered. “Before I said anything.”

I took the ring from her shaking hand and looked closer.

Same scratch on the side.
Same date engraved inside.
Same ring I had kissed before they closed the casket.

Impossible.

Unless…

I grabbed my daughter’s hand and we pushed through the crowd to the tent. The flap was half open now, moving in the evening wind.

Inside, there was no woman.

Just one wooden chair.
One dying candle.
And an old photo sitting on the table.

I picked it up — and my daughter started crying harder.

It was a picture of me… younger, terrified… standing beside my wife in a hospital room.

And in her arms were two newborn baby girls.

Not one.

Two.

My daughter looked up at me, trembling.
“Dad…” she whispered. “If I had a twin…”

That was when a voice behind us said:

“You were only meant to lose one of them.”

I turned around.

And there, standing in the doorway of the tent, wearing my wife’s ring chain around her neck…

was the girl with my daughter’s face.

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