A Six-Year-Old Warned His Mom Not to Go Home. Then the Van Arrived-eirian

Saying goodbye at an airport is supposed to be one of the smallest kinds of sadness.

A hug near security.

A kiss on the forehead.

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A promise to text when the plane lands.

Then the person walks away, and the one left behind finds the car, pays too much for parking, and returns to whatever ordinary life was waiting at home.

That was what I believed I was doing that Thursday morning at O’Hare.

My husband, Daniel, stood beside me under the harsh terminal lights with his carry-on tilted neatly against one polished shoe.

His suit was dark blue, perfectly pressed, and his tie had the tiny silver pattern I had bought him three Christmases earlier.

He looked like a man leaving for a three-day client review in Houston.

He looked like a man who expected to come home to dinner, folded laundry, and a wife grateful that he worked so hard.

“Houston,” he said, as if I had asked twice. “I’ll be back before you know it.”

Then he kissed my forehead.

The kiss was quick and dry.

I remember his cologne more than the kiss itself.

Sharp cedar.

Something expensive and cold.

Our son Ethan stood beside me with both hands on the straps of his backpack.

He was six years old, small for his age, and serious in a way people often mistook for shyness.

He noticed things other children missed.

A missing screw in a cabinet hinge.

A neighbor’s dog limping before any adult saw it.

The exact moment a grown-up’s smile stopped reaching their eyes.

Daniel used to joke that Ethan would grow up to be a detective.

I used to laugh because that felt harmless.

Now I understand that some children become watchful because the house teaches them to be.

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