I buried my child 15 years ago — then I hired a man at my store who looked EXACTLY like the son I had lost.

Karen gasped.

“The ledge was narrow,” Barry said. “Loose gravel everywhere. One wrong step and you could fall straight into the quarry lake. I panicked.” Barry closed his eyes. “I took one look at that drop, and I ran. I didn’t even think. I just ran all the way home.”

“And my son?” I asked.

Barry’s voice cracked. “He stayed.”

Karen sobbed harder.

“He probably thought he had to prove something,” Barry said, sadly.

“I just ran all the way home.”

My hands began to tremble. “What happened to him?”

“I didn’t know for years. The search started the next day,” Barry continued. “Police everywhere. Helicopters. People asking questions.”

“Why didn’t you tell anyone?” Karen cried.

Barry looked at her with guilt written all over his face. “I was scared. I thought they’d blame me. I kept telling myself maybe he’d make it home. But deep down, I knew something had gone wrong.”

“What happened to him?”

“When I turned 19, I ran into one of the older boys, now a man, at a gas station. He tried pretending he didn’t remember anything. But I shoved him against a wall and told him I wanted the truth. That’s when he finally admitted it.”

My heart pounded.

“He said your son slipped. The rocks gave out under his feet.”

Karen let out a broken cry.

“They panicked and ran,” Barry finished.

My chest felt hollow.

“That’s when he finally admitted it.”

Barry continued speaking. “I lost control after that. All those years of guilt hit me at once. I started swinging at him. It was so bad that the police showed up. I got arrested. I spent the next several years in and out of prison.”

I exhaled slowly.

“While I was locked up, I met another inmate,” he continued. “It turned out he’d been one of the older boys at the quarry that day. He’d been carrying the same guilt for years. He started studying spirituality inside. Said he’d finally forgiven himself.”

My head snapped up.

“I lost control after that.”

Barry sighed. “Before he was released, he helped me face everything I’d been running from. When I got out, I started looking for work. That’s when I saw the name of your store.” He glanced at me carefully.

“You knew it was mine?” I asked.

He nodded. “I applied because I wanted to tell you the truth. I just didn’t know how.”

Karen looked at him through red eyes. “So you lied instead?”

“I tried to say it many times,” Barry said. “But when I got close, I froze. I’m sorry.”

“You knew it was mine?”

No one spoke for a long time.

Finally, I pushed back from the table.

“I need some air.”

Then I walked out, and Barry must’ve left, cause he wasn’t around when I returned.

I barely slept that night. Memories of my son haunted me.

But Barry also featured. I thought about everything he’d told us.

He wasn’t around when I returned.

***

When morning came, I drove to the store as per usual.

Barry was already there. When he saw me, he looked nervous.

“Morning,” he said quietly.

“Come with me,” I replied.

We stepped into the office. I sat down.

“Do you know why I hired you?”

He shook his head.

“Because you looked like my son,” I said.

Barry was already there.

His eyes widened.

“Same name and age. It felt like fate,” I continued. “I never told Karen, but before you started working here, I began having dreams about my boy. In them, he kept telling me that the truth would be revealed.”

Barry looked stunned.

“When I first saw you, I thought you looked exactly like him. But after last night, I realized you don’t.”

“I am sorry.”

“I think maybe my son’s spirit followed you. Maybe because of the guilt you carried all those years.”

“I began having dreams about my boy.”

Barry’s eyes filled with tears. “I’m so sorry.”

I stood up. “I know. You were just a scared kid. You ran. Kids do that.”

Barry shook his head. “But I brought him there.”

“Yes,” I said gently. “And you carried that weight for 15 years.”

Barry wiped his face.

“My son deserves peace. And so do you.”

He stared at me.

“But I brought him there.”

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