At 34, I was a grieving widower raising our 5-year-old son, Luke. My wife Stacey had died in a car accident—at least, that’s what her parents told me. I never got to say goodbye. They arranged everything while I was away on a business trip, claiming the body was “too damaged.” I believed them. Grief made me accept what didn’t make sense. Two months later, trying to escape the pain, I took Luke on a beach vacation. That’s when he pointed and said, “Dad, look! Mom’s back!”
I turned—and there she was. Stacey. Alive. She saw us and ran. Shaken, I tracked her down. The truth unraveled: she faked her death to escape a double life—an affair, a pregnancy that wasn’t mine, and a plan to vanish. Her parents helped her disappear. They thought it was “for the best.” But she didn’t expect us to find her. When Luke saw her again, he called out,