s slumped in a hard plastic chair, the kind they have in places you never want to be. A police station. A man in
ave no record of a
. I remembered the look on their faces, a mixture of pity and annoyance. I remembered the crush
small hand fit perfectly in mine,
hers, they all swore they' d never seen me with a child. Not that day, not ever. My wife, Ava, had been called. She arrived, her
one. Me, gesturing wildly at an empty space beside me. Me, brea
never existed. The world had conspired to erase him, and in doing so, it had erased me too. I was just a crazy man, lost in a delu
I bl
ock on the nightstand read 7:05 AM. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic, wild drumbeat. I knew
y. The day it
ashed over me, but I ignored it. I could hear sounds from the kitchen. The clink of a
set. I didn' t know how or why, but I was back. And this time, I had every
e small table, kicking his feet in a high chair that was almost too small for him now, was Leo. He had a smudge of jam on
up at me a
add
he grunted in protest. I buried my face in his neck, breathing in hi
quizzical smil
appy to see us this
hat other timeline with horrifying clarity. The empty photo albums on my phone. The blank look on Ava' s face as she denied our son' s existence. The wa
ders. He immediately went back to his cereal, b
arten today," I said, my v
k, a sleek grey pantsuit. She usually handled the morn
nd. You have that demo
too forcefully. "I' l
gaze must have been unsettling. She saw a husband who was a little too
id. If you'
My priorities had been violently rearranged. Nothing else matt
e. They would say I was unstable, that I was projecting my own issues onto a non-
of Leo and straightened his little jacket. H
y?" I asked, my voic
!" he
down at our joined hands, his tiny fingers wrapped around my index finger. I ma
s time. I will burn the whole world d