Last Thursday started like every other awful, quiet night I’ve had since my family fell apart. By midnight I was scrubbing a clean counter just to avoid thinking too much—right up until three soft knocks on my front door turned my whole world inside out. It was Thursday night.
Late.
The kind of late when nothing good ever happens. I was wiping the same spot on the counter for the third time, just to fill the silence, when I heard it.
Because that voice belonged to one person, and there was no way I could be hearing it now. Three soft knocks.
A pause.
Then a tiny, trembling voice I hadn’t heard in two years. “Mom… it’s me.”
The dishtowel slipped from my hand. For a second, the words didn’t register.
I tried to make sense of them, but they felt empty.
Then my whole body turned ice-cold. “Mom?
Can you open the door?”
Because that voice belonged to one person, and there was no way I could be hearing it now. It sounded exactly like my little boy.
My son, who passed away when he was five.
My son, whose tiny coffin I had kissed before they lowered it into the earth. My son I had begged, screamed, and prayed for every single night since. Gone.
For two whole years.
Another knock. “Mom?
Can you open?”
I forced my legs to move down the hallway, holding onto the wall for support. My throat tightened.
I couldn’t breathe.
Grief had played tricks on me before—phantom footsteps, a quick flash of blonde hair in the supermarket, a laugh that sounded just like his. But this voice wasn’t a trick of my mind. It was clear, real, and very much alive.
Too alive.
I forced my legs to move down the hallway again, gripping the wall. “Mommy?”
That one word slipped under the door and broke me wide open.
I unlocked the door with shaking hands and pulled it open. “Mommy?” he whispered.
“I came home.”
My knees nearly buckled.
A little boy stood on the porch, barefoot and dirty, shivering in the porch light. He wore the same faded blue rocket-ship T-shirt he had on the day he went to the hospital. He looked up at me with those big brown eyes.
Same freckles.
Same little dimple on his right cheek. Same stubborn cowlick that never stayed flat no matter how much I wet it.
“Mommy?” he whispered again. “I came home.”
“Who… who are you?” I barely got the words out.
My heart just… stopped.
I grabbed the doorframe to stay upright. “Who… who are you?” I asked again. He frowned, like I’d just told a bad joke.
“It’s me,” he said.
“I’m Euan. Mom, why are you crying?”
Hearing his name felt like a punch in the chest.
“My… my son… my son is gone,” I said. My voice didn’t even sound like mine.
“But I’m right here,” he whispered.
“Why are you saying that?”
His lip started to tremble. “But I’m right here,” he repeated softly. “Why are you saying that?”
He stepped inside like he’d done it a thousand times before.
The way he moved felt so natural it sent chills down my spine.
Every part of me screamed that this couldn’t be real. But deep down, something desperate whispered, Hold him.
Don’t question it. I pushed that voice away.
“Where have you been, Euan?” I asked.
He blinked. “Euan.”
Same name as my son. “What’s your daddy’s name?” I asked.
“Daddy’s Roger,” he answered quietly.
Roger. My husband.
The man who died of a heart attack six months after our son. On the bathroom floor.
I felt the room spin.
“Where have you been, Euan?” I asked again. His small fingers grabbed my sleeve. His eyes filled with tears.
“With the man,” he whispered.
“He said he was my dad now. But he’s not you.”
My stomach turned.
I grabbed my phone from the little table by the door, hands shaking so hard I nearly dropped it. His fingers tightened on my sleeve.
“Don’t call him,” he begged, panic in his voice.
“Please don’t call him. He’ll be mad I ran away.”
“I’m not calling him,” I said. “I’m calling for help.”
“My son is here,” I choked out to the operator.
“He died two years ago.
But he’s standing in my house right now. I don’t understand.”
I dialled 999.
The operator answered, and I was already crying. “My son is here,” I sobbed.
But he’s here. In my house. Please help me.”
They said officers were on their way.
While we waited, Euan walked through the house like he’d never left.
He went straight to the kitchen, opened the exact right cupboard without even looking. He pulled out his blue plastic cup—the one with cartoon sharks.
“Mommy, please don’t let them take me again,” he whispered. His favourite cup.
“Do we still have the blue juice?” he asked.
“How do you know where that is?” I whispered. He gave me a funny look. “You said it was my special cup,” he said.
“You said nobody else could use it because I drool on the straw.”
I had said those exact words.
Car headlights swept across the windows. “Again?” I repeated.
“Who took you before?”
Euan flinched. “Mommy, please don’t let them take me again,” he begged.
“Again?” I asked.
“Who took you the first time?”
He shook his head hard, eyes huge. The doorbell rang. He jumped like a startled rabbit.
Two police officers stood on the porch—one man, one woman.
“Ma’am?” the man said. “I’m Officer Daley.
This is Officer Ruiz. You called about a child?”
“He says he’s my son,” I said.
“My son died two years ago.”
I stepped aside so they could see him.
“He says he’s my son,” I repeated. “My son died two years ago.”
Euan peeked out from behind my legs, holding tight to my shirt. Daley knelt down to his level.
“Hey, little man,” he said gently.
“What’s your name?”
“I’m Euan,” he answered. Daley looked up at me.
“How old are you, Euan?” he asked. Euan held up six fingers.
“I’m six,” he said.
“Almost seven. Daddy said we’d have a huge cake when I turn seven.”
Ruiz looked at me. “Ma’am?” she asked softly.
“That’s right,” I whispered.
“He would be almost seven now.”
“And your son is… deceased?” Daley asked carefully. “Yes,” I said, voice breaking.
“Car accident. I held his hand in the hospital.
I saw them close the coffin.
I stood by his grave.”
“I’m not leaving him.”
My voice cracked. Euan pressed his face into my side. “I don’t like when you say that,” he whispered.
“It makes my tummy hurt.”
Ruiz was quiet for a moment.
“Ma’am, we need to get him checked by a doctor,” she said. “If it’s okay with you, we’ll take you both to the hospital.
Child Services and a detective will meet us there.”
“I’m not leaving him,” I said. Euan squeezed my hand even tighter.
“You don’t have to,” Daley said.
“You can stay with him the whole time.”
At the hospital they put Euan in a small children’s room with bright pictures on the walls. Euan never let go of my hand. A woman with a detective badge came to the door.
“Mrs.
Fraser? I’m Detective Morag,” she said gently.
“I know this feels impossible. We’re going to figure it out together.”
A doctor examined Euan, then a nurse came in with cotton swabs.
“Don’t leave,” he whispered to me.
“We’d like to do a quick DNA test,” Morag explained. “It’ll tell us for sure if he’s your biological son. Are you okay with that?”
“Yes,” I said right away.
“Please.”
Euan looked nervous.
“What’s that for?” he asked. “Just a cotton bud,” I told him.
“They rub it inside your cheek. I’ll do it too, okay?”
He let them do his cheek, then grabbed my wrist when they did mine.
“Don’t leave,” he whispered again.
I sat on a plastic chair just outside his room while he watched cartoons, looking over at me every few minutes. “I’m not going anywhere,” I promised. They said it would take about two hours.
Two hours.
After two whole years. I sat on the same plastic chair while Euan watched cartoons and kept checking I was still there.
“Mommy?” he’d call every few minutes. “Yes, baby?” I’d answer.
“Just checking,” he’d say.
Detective Morag sat beside me with her notebook. “Tell me about the accident,” she said softly. So I told her everything.
The rainy night.
The red light we never saw. The awful crunch of metal.
The ambulance sirens. The beeping machines.
The doctors shaking their heads.
The tiny blue rocket shirt. Kissing the coffin. Roger clutching handfuls of dirt like he could dig our boy back out.
Finding Roger dead on the bathroom floor six months later.
When I finished, Morag’s eyes were wet. “If that little boy isn’t your son,” I

