
The younger man stared at him like the ground had opened under his feet.
No one in the store moved.
The salesman had gone pale. The guards stood frozen near the door. Even the soft hum of the display cases felt far away now.
The old manâs eyes filled.
âDaniel,â he said again, voice breaking, âitâs me.â
The younger manâs lips parted, but no sound came out.
He looked back at the watch in his hand as if it had suddenly become too heavy to hold.
âMy fatherâŠâ he whispered. âThey told me he died.â
The old man shook his head slowly.
âThey made sure youâd believe that.â
Rainwater still dripped from his coat. His hands trembled helplessly at his sides.
âI searched for you,â he said. âFor years. Every city. Every lead. Every lie they fed me, I chased.â
Danielâs controlled expression cracked. His eyes were wet now, but he was still fighting it.
âNo,â he whispered. âNo⊠you left.â
The words hit the old man like a blow.
âI never left you.â
His voice collapsed on the last word.
Danielâs breathing turned uneven. He looked ten years younger and infinitely more lost all at once.
The old man stepped closer, careful, like he was approaching something wounded.
âThey took you from me after your mother died,â he said. âI had that watch made for your eighteenth birthday. I never stopped carrying the other half of the engraving in my heart.â
Danielâs jaw shook.
He looked at the inscription one more time, then turned the watch over in his hand and noticed something elseâinside the worn leather strap, stitched almost invisibly, was a tiny faded thread in the shape of a star.
His breath broke completely.
âMy mother used to sew stars into my clothes,â he said.
The old man nodded through tears.
âShe said theyâd help you find your way home.â
That did it.
Danielâs face crumpled. Years of control, distance, and polished calm broke apart in front of everyone.
He stepped forward once, then stopped, like he still couldnât trust something this impossible.
The old man didnât wait anymore.
He reached out with trembling hands and cupped Danielâs face for one second, like he needed to feel the truth.
âMy boy,â he whispered.
Daniel let out one shattered breath and pulled him into a desperate embrace.
The whole store stood in silence as the old man clung to him like he was holding a life returned from the dead.
Over Danielâs shoulder, the salesman looked down, ashamed now, unable to meet either manâs eyes.
Daniel finally pulled back just enough to look at him again.
His voice was rough, broken, but sure.
âYou came back for me.â
The old man nodded, tears running freely.
âI never stopped.â