“And this,” he added, pulling back his hair to reveal a scar near his temple. It was long and pale like an old road on a faded map. “You forgot your whole life?” I asked quietly.
He nodded. “I lived. Took jobs.
Found places to sleep. Got by. I always had this feeling something was missing, but I couldn’t reach it.
Then one day, last month, it all came back. Your mom’s voice. This kitchen.
Your name. So I came home.”
I looked at the man across from me. The ghost Mom never spoke of.
The silence that sat beside her at every dinner table. “Why didn’t you call? Or write?
Something?”
He met my eyes. “I didn’t know I was gone.”
I didn’t answer. I stood, went to the linen closet, pulled out a blanket, and laid it gently on the chair beside him.
“You can sleep here tonight,” I said. “But don’t expect me to forgive you over a cup of tea.”
He nodded slowly. “I won’t.”
I woke up to the warm smell of toast drifting through the air, soft and buttery, like how mornings used to feel when I was a kid.
The quiet clatter of drawers being opened and shut came from downstairs. Not loud, just steady. Like someone trying not to wake the house.
I got out of bed and moved down the stairs slowly, each step creaking under my bare feet. In the kitchen, Dean stood by the table, folding up clothes and tucking them into a worn, faded rucksack. His movements were careful and practiced, like he’d packed and unpacked the same bag more times than he could count.
“You’re leaving?” I asked, my voice still rough from sleep. He looked up, eyes soft but tired. “Didn’t want to cause more trouble.”
I leaned against the doorway.
“You didn’t cause it. You are it.”
Dean gave a sad smile, like he knew that already. “Fair.”
I stared at the bag, the same one from last night, the one that looked older than me.
“You know, Mom never dated after you. She said she was too tired for men who left with empty promises and came back with empty hands.”
His sigh came out deep and slow. “She was always right.”
The room went quiet.
Just the hum of the fridge between us. “You didn’t have to pack,” I said finally. “I didn’t mean for you to go.”
He froze.
“No?”
“I said you could stay the night. I didn’t say we were done talking.”
His shoulders relaxed a little. “I can’t forgive what I don’t remember,” I said, voice low.
“But I can try to learn who you are. Maybe.”
Dean nodded and slowly zipped the bag closed. “Thank you.”
By noon, we’d opened the curtains.
The house no longer looked like a shell of someone’s memories. Dean helped water the rest of the plants. Earl curled against his leg, purring with approval.
“Mom comes back Monday,” I said. “She might faint when she sees you.”
“I’ll catch her,” he chuckled. We sat on the porch.
The air smelled like cut grass and summer. A storm brewed behind the clouds but hadn’t yet found the courage to speak. He looked over.
“Do you think she’ll believe me?”
“I think… she always hoped for a story like this. Even when she didn’t say it.”
We sat in silence, two people not quite family, not quite strangers, waiting for a door to open, or a heart to.
And when Mom did finally come home, she found us both there—waiting. Tell us what you think about this story, and share it with your friends. It might inspire them and brighten their day.
Source: amomama
My mom was out of town. I came to water her plants, feed the cat, and sleep off a long day. But when I collapsed onto her bed, it wasn’t empty.
A stranger was already in it—snoring. And when I screamed, he said my name like he’d known me forever. I stepped into the café just after six, the sky outside already wearing its evening blue like a worn-out coat.
My feet ached, my shoulders sagged, and the smell of roasted beans hit me like a soft punch. After a day of standing, nodding, and saying “Sure, I’ll take care of it,” caffeine felt less like a choice and more like a need. Bonnie, my coworker, floated past me to the counter, already smiling at the barista.
“Chamomile with a hint of peach, please,” she chirped. I dragged myself forward. “Give me your strongest,” I said.
“Whatever keeps eyelids from glueing shut.”
The barista chuckled, and a minute later, I had a steaming cup of what smelled like bitter courage. I tore open three sugar packets and dumped them in one after the other. Bonnie watched, eyebrows raised, and stirred her tea like it was some delicate spell.
“Sugar’s white death, you know?” she said, lips curling into a knowing smile. Her hands were always neat—short nails, no chipped polish. The honey drizzled into her cup caught the light like gold.
I didn’t flinch. “I’ve heard that a hundred times from my mom,” I said. “And a couple hundred more from everyone else.”
She tilted her head.
“So you’re not like your mom?”
I blew on my coffee and took a careful sip. It burned a little, but in a good way. Like it was waking something up inside me.
“Nope,” I said. “She doesn’t touch sugar. Thinks it’ll make her look eighty by fifty.”
Bonnie laughed softly.
“And you?”
I shrugged. “I don’t care about that.”
We found a booth near the back, tucked away from the rush of customers. The light overhead flickered every few minutes like it couldn’t make up its mind.
We talked about nothing. And then a little about everything. Work gossip.
Old boyfriends. Favorite sandwiches. For a while, the weight I’d been carrying all day slid off my shoulders.
Two guys walked in sometime after seven. Both were tall and smelled like they’d bathed in department-store cologne. One had dimples deep enough to lose a coin in.
They grabbed the table next to us. “Hey,” Dimple Guy said. “You ladies from around here?”







