Georgia was at the beach with her grandchildren when they abruptly pointed to a nearby cafe.
Her heart skipped a beat as they shouted the words that would rock her world. The couple in the café looked precisely like their parents, who d.i.e.d two years ago.
Some days it’s just a dull aching in your chest. Some days, it hits you like a sucker blow in the heart.
That summer morning in my kitchen, staring at an anonymous letter, I felt something quite different. I guess it was a mix of hope and horror.
My hands trembled as I read the five words again: “They’re not really gone.”
The crisp white paper felt as if it were burning my fingers. I felt I was managing my grief by attempting to provide a stable existence for my grandchildren, Andy and Peter, after losing my daughter, Monica, and her husband, Stephen. But this note made me understand how wrong I was.
They had an acc:ide:nt two years ago. I remember Andy and Peter often asking me where their parents were and when they would return.
It took me several months to convince them that their mother and father would never return. It broke my heart when I told them they’d have to handle things on their own now, but I’d be there for them whenever they needed their parents.
After all of my hard work, I received this anonymous letter claiming Monica and Stephan were still alive.
“They’re… not really gone?” As I sank into my kitchen chair, I said to myself. “What kind of sick game is this?”
I had crumpled the paper and was going to throw it away when my phone rang.
My credit card provider alerted me to a charge on Monica’s old card. The one I kept active only to keep a bit of her.
“How is that even possible?” I whispered. “I’ve had this card for two years. How can someone use it when it’s been sitting in the drawer?”
I immediately contacted the bank’s customer service hotline.
“Hello, this is Billy speaking. How may I help you?” The customer support representative responded.
“Hi. I, uh, wanted to verify this recent transaction on my daughter’s card,” I explained.
“Of course. May I have the first six and last four digits of the card number and your relationship to the account holder?” Billy asked.
I gave him the details, stating, “I’m her mother. She… pass:ed away two years ago, and I’ve been managing her remaining accounts.”
After a lull on the line, Billy spoke carefully. “I’m very sorry to hear that, ma’am. I don’t see a transaction on this card. The one you’re talking about has been made using a virtual card linked to the account.”
“A virtual card?” I inquired with a frown. “But I never linked one to this account. How can a virtual card be active when I have the physical card here?”
“Virtual cards are separate from the physical card, so they can continue to function independently unless deactivated. Would you like me to cancel the virtual card for you?” Billy inquired gently.
“No, no,” I managed to say. I didn’t want to deactivate the card because I assumed Monica must have activated it while she was alive. “Please leave it active. Could you tell me when the virtual card was created?”
He paused to verify. “It was activated a week before the date you mentioned your daughter passed.”
I felt a shiver go down my spine. “Thank you, Billy. That’ll be all for now.”
Then I contacted my closest friend, Ella. I informed her about the unusual letter and the transaction on Monica’s card.
“That’s impossible,” Ella exclaimed. “Could it be a mistake?”
The charge was not large. It was only $23.50 at a neighborhood coffee shop. Part of me wanted to go to the business and learn more about the transaction, but I was also terrified of discovering something I wasn’t meant to know.
I intended to look into this subject over the weekend, but what happened on Saturday turned my world upside down.
Andy and Peter asked to go to the beach on Saturday, so I accompanied them there. Ella had volunteered to meet us there to help me care for the kids.
The seaside breeze carried the salt spray as the kids plunged in the shallow waves, their laughter booming across the sand. I hadn’t heard them sound that lighthearted in a long time.
Ella and I lounged on our beach towels, watching the kids play.
I was showing her the anonymous letter when I heard Andy exclaim.
“Grandma, look!” He took Peter’s hand and pointed to the beachside café. “That’s our mom and dad!”
My heart has stopped. A woman with Monica’s dyed hair and beautiful stance sat barely thirty feet away, leaning against a man who could easily have been Stephan’s twin.
They were enjoying a tray of fresh fruits.
“Please, watch them for a bit,” I pleaded to Ella, my voice cracking with urgency. She consented without inquiry, but concern clouded her gaze.
“Don’t go anywhere,” I instructed the boys. “You can sunbathe here. Stay close to Ella, okay?
The kids nodded, and I turned to face the couple in the cafe.
My heart skipped a beat as they stood and strolled along a short path surrounded by sea oats and wild roses. My feet moved on their own, following at a distance.
They walked closely together, whispering and occasionally laughing. The woman tucked her hair behind her ear, just like Monica often did. Stephan’s collegiate football injuries caused him to walk with a minor limp.
Then I heard them talking.
“It’s risky, but we had no choice, Emily,” the man added.
Emily? I thought. Why does he call her Emily?
They followed a shell-lined walk to a cottage covered in flowering grapevines.
“I know,” the woman sighed. “But I miss them… especially the boys.”
My fingers turned white as I grabbed the wooden fence that surrounded the cabin.
I assumed it was you. But why… why would you do this?
When they went inside the villa, I took out my phone and dialed 911. The dispatcher patiently listened as I described the untenable situation.
I remained at the fence, listening for further proof. I just couldn’t believe what was occurring.
Finally, summoning all of my strength, I approached the cottage door and rang the bell.
After a brief interval of silence, footsteps approached.
The door opened, and there stood my daughter. As soon as she recognized me, her face turned pale.
“Mom?” she gasped. “What… how did you find us?”
Before I could react, Stephan appeared behind her. Then the sound of approaching sirens permeated the air.
“How could you?” My voice quivered from wrath and grief. “How could you leave your own children behind? Do you have any idea what you put us through?”
The police cars arrived, and two officers approached fast but cautiously.
“I think we’ll need to ask some questions,” one remarked, gazing between us. “This… this is not something we see every day.”
Monica and Stephan, who had changed their identities to Emily and Anthony, shared their experience in parts and pieces.
“It wasn’t supposed to be like this,” Monica replied, her voice shaking. “We were… we were drowning, you know? The debts, the loan sharks… they kept coming, demanding more. We tried everything, but it just got worse.”
Stephan sighed. “They didn’t just want money. They were threatening us, and we didn’t want to drag the kids into the mess we created.”
Monica continued, tears trickling down her cheeks. “We thought if we left, we’d be giving the kids a better, more stable life. We thought they’d be better off without us. Leaving them behind was the hardest thing we ever did.”
They said that they manufactured the accident to make it appear as if they had fallen from a cliff into the river, anticipating that the authorities would quickly cease looking for them and assume they were dead.
They told how they relocated to another place to start over and even changed their identities.
“But I couldn’t stop thinking about my babies,” Monica admitted. “I needed to see them, so we rented this cottage for a week, just to be close to them.”
My heart sank as I listened to their narrative, yet resentment lingered beneath my sorrow.
I couldn’t help but feel there had to be a better method to deal with loan sharks.
Once they’d admitted everything, I texted Ella our location, and her car arrived with Andy and Peter. The youngsters burst out, their faces beaming with pleasure as they recognized their parents.
“Mom! Dad!” they exclaimed, sprinting toward their parents. “You’re here! We knew you’d come back!”
Monica gazed at them, tears welling up in her eyes. She was meeting her children after two years.
“Oh, my sweet boys… I missed you so much. I’m so sorry,” she said, hugging them.
I watched the event play out, whispering to myself, “But at what cost, Monica? What have you done?”
The cops allowed Monica and Stephen to have a brief reunion before pulling them away. The senior officer looked at me with sympathy in his eyes.
“I’m sorry, ma’am, but they could face some serious charges here. They’ve broken a lot of laws.”
“And my grandchildren?” I inquired, witnessing Andy and Peter’s perplexed expressions as their parents were separated from them again. “How do I explain any of this to them? They’re just kids.”
“That’s something you’ll have to decide,” he said gently. “But the truth is bound to come out eventually.”
Later that night, after putting the kids to bed, I sat alone in my living room. The anonymous letter rested on the coffee table in front of me, its words taking on new significance.
I picked it up and read those five words once more: “They’re not really gone.”
I still didn’t know who sent it, but they were correct.
Monica and Stephan were not gone. They’d decided to leave. And strangely, that felt worse than knowing they were d3ad.
“I don’t know if I can protect the kids from the sadness,” I whispered to the quiet room, “but I’ll do whatever it takes to keep them safe.”
Now, I occasionally wonder if I should have called the cops. Part of me wishes I could have let my daughter to live the life she desired, but another part of me wishes she had realized her actions were wrong.
Do you believe I did the right thing by calling the cops? What would you have done if you were in my position?
Leave a Reply