at Closure
Fifteen years ago, Lisa walked out to get diapers for our newborn son, Noah—and never came back. No calls. No clues. Just vanished into the rain-soaked night. I filed reports, begged for answers, and waited by the door every night, wondering if I’d missed something—some silent plea buried in exhaustion. For Noah’s sake, I kept going. I told him she left, that we didn’t know why, but it wasn’t his fault.
Then, out of nowhere, I saw her. Fifteen years later. At a grocery store, of all places. A familiar voice, a flick of her hair—and suddenly, I was chasing a ghost down the cereal aisle. “Lisa?” I said, and she turned. We stood there, years collapsing between us. Outside, in the parking lot, she said she had been drowning—too overwhelmed to ask for help. So she ran. To France. Told herself it was better for everyone.
I told her the truth: Noah had waited by the window every day for months, hoping she’d come home. Her eyes welled up. She didn’t beg or defend—only asked that, if Noah ever wanted to know her, I’d tell him she was here. I said I would. That was all I could give. She’d missed too much to ask for more.
And then I left. Not out of hate. Not out of anger. But because I had already survived the storm she created. I had raised our son. I had healed. Some stories don’t need a reunion. Some just need an ending. And for the first time in fifteen years, I wasn’t searching for Lisa. I had finally stopped looking.