Eddie kicked a soccer ball across the grass while Mark stood stiff, unsure how to approach.
“Hi,” Mark said at last. “I’m Mark.”
Eddie looked at him curiously. “Hello, sir.”
Mark gave a shaky laugh. “Hi, Eddie.”
They talked awkwardly at first — about school, soccer, favorite snacks — and then more easily. Susan watched from a distance, arms folded, eyes shining.
Later, as the sun dipped lower, Mark sat beside me on a bench.
“I didn’t do this for you,” I replied. “I did it for Eddie.”
After that, we began helping — groceries, school supplies, rent when Susan needed it. Mark called his son every Sunday. He listened more than he spoke.
Our marriage shifted, but it didn’t collapse.
Months later, one evening, Mark reached for my hand.
“I don’t deserve your kindness,” he said.
“Maybe not,” I answered. “But love isn’t about what we earn. It’s about what we choose.”
He squeezed my hand.
And for the first time since that night at the hospital, I felt steady again.

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