But when you’re a parent watching your child fight for his life, logic doesn’t matter. All I could see was the man who had taken my boy away from me.
His name was Marcus, though I didn’t know it at first. The first time I saw him was on the third day. I walked into Jake’s room, and there he was — a tall man in a leather vest, gray in his beard, reading Harry Potter out loud beside my son’s bed.
But the next day, he came back. And the day after that.
I wanted to hate him — I did hate him — but my wife, Sarah, saw something I couldn’t.
“He didn’t run,” she said. “He stayed. He helped. Maybe he needs this as much as Jake does.”
I couldn’t understand then how right she was.
The Stranger Who Wouldn’t Leave
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