Alexander Sterling had spent seven years perfecting the art of the flinchless smile, building a life of sterile, high-stakes success in Manhattan while hiding the hollow ache of a man told he could never be a father. He built digital tools for families, yet his own world remained a fortress of silence. But as he stood in his lobby, the world tilted on its axis as two boys sprinted toward him, shouting, “Daddy!” and he realized his carefully constructed reality was
The boys’ confession hung in the air, heavy and impossible. “Mama said you’d be tall,” Noah repeated, his small hand still gripping the strap of his backpack. “She said you’d look serious but you wouldn’t be mean.”
Alex felt the weight of a hundred eyes on him. His security team hovered at the perimeter, unsure whether to intervene or give him space. He knelt on the cold marble, his Italian suit trousers soaking up the dust of the floor, and looked at the twins. They were seven, perhaps eight. They were his face, his jawline, his eyes. It was a biological impossibility, a cruel trick of genetics or a miracle he wasn’t prepared to believe.
“Who is your mother?” Alex asked again, his voice cracking. He needed a name. He needed a bridge back to the man he had been before the crash, before the isolation, before the silence.
Lucas, the one with the wrinkled envelope, held it out with trembling hands. “She told us to give you this when we found you. She said you were busy saving the world, but that you’d want to know we were here.”