I drove three hours to surprise my mom for her birthday, and the very first thing I noticed was my husband’s car tucked away behind the barn.
I was supposed to be the one doing the surprising.
That Friday afternoon, I left work early in Columbus, threw some flowers and a box of fancy chocolates into the back seat, and started the drive south toward the old family farm in Ohio.
My mom was turning sixty-four. Small town, same white farmhouse I grew up in. I hadn’t visited in six months, and the guilt sat heavy with me the entire way.
By the time I turned onto the gravel driveway, the sun was already dipping low behind the fields.
Usually, the crunch of tires on that driveway meant one thing—home.
My dad would be out on the porch in his wheelchair. My mom would be standing in the kitchen doorway, waving a dish towel and smiling before I even stepped out of the car.
But that day, the porch was empty.
No wheelchair.
No dad.
No sign of my mom at the window.
Instead, something else caught my eye near the machine shed.
A bright blue tarp, stretched tight behind the barn and held down with cinder blocks. It stood out sharply against everything else, almost like it didn’t belong there at all.
My dad hasn’t bought new equipment since his stroke. And my mom definitely isn’t the type to suddenly buy farm machinery on impulse.
Curiosity pulled me closer.
The shape under the tarp didn’t look like a tractor.
It was too low.
Too smooth.
More like something built for the city.
A gust of wind lifted one corner of the tarp just enough for me to catch a glimpse of metallic silver—and a wheel I recognized instantly.
Same alloy rim.
Same small scratch just above it from a parking garage back in Columbus.
It was my husband’s car.
The problem was, he was supposed to be in Chicago.
I had packed his suitcase myself the day before. I had driven him to the airport. I kissed him goodbye as he left for what he said was a meeting with investors.
So why was his car sitting behind my parents’ barn?
I stood there, staring at it, trying to make sense of something that didn’t make sense at all.
Then I heard it.
His voice.
Coming from the kitchen window.
And I froze.