Nathan Cole first saw the two boys on a rainy Thursday afternoon in Boston.
For a brief moment, he wondered if exhaustion had finally started playing tricks on him.
He had just walked out of a difficult meeting with investors at the Harbor Crescent Hotel, one of the few properties still surviving after his ambitious expansion plans collapsed. Outside, heavy rain covered the city, and inside the lobby, guests moved quickly across the polished floors with umbrellas and luggage.
Nathan barely noticed them.
At forty-one years old, he looked far older than his age suggested.
The confidence that once made him a successful businessman and a familiar face in magazines had disappeared. What remained was a quieter, more fragile version of himself.
His expensive coat hung loosely around him. He had lost too much weight after Emily disappeared, and he had never truly recovered.
Sleep came in short, restless bursts.
Silence had become his constant companion.
He was almost at the exit when a sound stopped him.
A child’s laughter.
Not ordinary laughter.
Something familiar.
Something that reached into a place he had tried to bury.
Near the hotel fountain, two young boys were running around while their babysitter struggled to calm them down.
Twins.
Around four years old.
Dark hair.
Tall for their age.
And then Nathan saw their eyes.
Gray-blue.
The exact same shade he had seen every morning in his own reflection.
His body went completely still.
One of the boys ran too quickly and nearly collided with him.
“Sorry!” the child said with a bright smile.
Nathan stared at him.
The boy stared back.
Then he smiled again.
A smile that looked painfully like Emily’s.
Nathan felt something break inside him.
The babysitter hurried over.
“Boys, come on. Your mother told you not to run inside.”
Mother.
That single word made Nathan’s heartbeat race.
The second boy looked up at him with curiosity.
“Why do you look sad?”
The question hit harder than he expected.
Nathan opened his mouth, but no words came.
Because one impossible thought had already taken over his mind.
Mine.
The babysitter noticed his expression and quickly guided the boys away.
“Sorry again,” she said before leaving.
But as they disappeared around the corner, one of the twins looked back.
And Nathan saw it.
A small crescent-shaped birthmark beneath the boy’s jaw.
The same unusual mark Nathan had under his own ear.
A family trait.
Something inherited.
Something impossible to ignore.
The entire world seemed to tilt.
Nathan stood frozen in the middle of the hotel lobby as rain crashed against the windows.
Twins.
Emily.
Four years.
His knees nearly gave out.
“Mr. Cole?”
His assistant’s voice pulled him back.
Nathan blinked, slowly returning to reality.
“Who was that woman?” he asked.
“What woman?”
“The boys’ mother.”
His assistant hesitated.
“I’m not sure. Maybe a guest staying here.”
Nathan’s heart pounded.
Every logical explanation fought against what he already knew.
Emily had disappeared four years earlier.
No goodbye.
No explanation.
No message.
Nothing.
And now two little boys carrying his eyes had appeared in front of him.
His sons.
The realization crushed him.
Emily had been pregnant when she left.
Pregnant.
And he had never known.
Nathan grabbed the edge of the reception desk to steady himself.
Memories flooded back.
Emily touching her stomach before their anniversary.
Emily refusing wine at dinner.
Emily constantly looking tired.
How had he missed it?
Because he had stopped truly seeing her.
That realization hurt more than anything.
“Find out who is staying here with children,” Nathan ordered.
His assistant hesitated.
“Sir, there are privacy concerns—”
“Please.”
The desperation in his voice surprised even him.
Twenty minutes later, Nathan stood alone in his office overlooking the harbor.
His assistant returned holding a tablet.
Before she even spoke, he already felt the answer coming.
“The reservation is under Emily Bennett.”
Bennett.
Not Cole.
A different name.
A name that proved she had built a life without him.
“She checked in three days ago,” his assistant continued. “Two children are listed. Ethan and Elliot Bennett.”
Nathan closed his eyes.
His sons had names.
They were real.
And they had spent their entire lives without him.
Guilt overwhelmed him.
“Where is she now?”
“She checked out this morning.”
“Where did she go?”
“We don’t know.”
Nathan felt the panic return.
The same panic he had felt when Emily vanished.
Only this time it was worse.
Because now he understood exactly what he had lost.
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