Every Saturday at 2:00 PM, a motorcyclist would enter the cemetery and head straight for my wife’s grave. For six months, I watched him from my car. At the same time. With the same ritual.
He never brought flowers. He never said a word. He sat cross-legged next to Sarah’s gravestone, his head bowed, his hands gently resting on the grass. For an hour. Then he would press his palm against the stone and walk away.
The first time I saw him, I thought he’d gone to the wrong grave. The cemetery is huge. Mistakes happen. But he returned. Again and again.
I began to feel something unexpected: anger. Who was this man? How did he know my wife? Why did he mourn her so intensely when some of her family hadn’t visited her in months?
Sarah died fourteen months ago. She died of breast cancer. She was forty-three. We’d been married for twenty years. Two children. A wonderful life. A peaceful life.
She was a pediatric nurse. She volunteered at church. She drove a minivan. Her idea of rebellion? Ordering a triple espresso in her latte. Nothing in her past connected her to a motorcyclist.
But this man, this stranger, was mourning her as if she’d lost someone irreplaceable. I could see it in the way his shoulders were shaking. Respecting her silence.
After three months, I couldn’t take it anymore. I got out of the car and approached him.
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