He Found Clara In Maine With Twins Who Looked Exactly Like Him-hothiyenvy_5

By the time Dominic Romano found Clara outside Harbor Light Café, he had already imagined her death more times than he could admit.

In some versions, she had been pulled from a river with no name on her.

In others, she had run so far from Boston that even fear could not find her.

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The worst version was the one where she had chosen to leave him because every cruel thing people said about Dominic Romano had finally sounded true.

Rain hit the café awning in hard little bursts.

The Atlantic was gray beyond the pier, and the late afternoon carried that Maine cold that gets into sleeves, shoes, and old memories.

Clara stood under the awning with two children holding her hands.

A boy.

A girl.

Both around five.

Dominic saw the boy first, and the world narrowed until the street, the cars, the tourists, and even the rain seemed to fall away.

The boy had his eyes.

Dominic knew it before thought had time to soften the truth.

He had seen those eyes in his father, in his grandfather, in the men whose names filled Romano family stories like warnings.

He had never expected to see them in a child looking up from under a little rain hood.

Clara saw him next.

Her face went white so quickly that for one second he thought she might faint right there on the sidewalk.

Five years earlier, she had been the only person in Boston who spoke to him like he was still a man and not just a last name.

She had eaten takeout with him in the kitchen because she hated formal dining rooms.

She had fallen asleep on his shoulder during a storm with one hand tucked into his coat pocket for warmth.

She had once told him that loving a dangerous man did not make her brave.

It made her responsible for her own heart.

Then one night she opened his bedroom door and saw her sister inside.

That was the story Clara had carried.

That was the picture that had burned through every explanation he never got to give.

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