The day before my son’s sixth birthday should have been ordinary in the best possible way: frantic, joyful, and sprinkled with the kind of minor disasters that become our favorite stories later. Instead, it is the night I still sometimes replay—not to re-live the pain, but to remind myself how fierce and ordinary love can be when it’s tested. My name is Laura.
I’m thirty-six, and this is my second marriage. My first husband, Peter, died when our little boy was still toddling; chemo and hospital rooms and a steady erosion of hope took him from us when Lucas was two. For years after, grief felt like a low hum—there, unavoidable, shaping every choice.
I learned to function on small mercies: a sunny morning, the sound of Lucas’ laugh at the park, a good cup of coffee. I never thought I’d fall in love again. Then Aaron happened.
We met at a neighborhood barbecue on the Fourth of July. I remember how he crouched down to Lucas’s level and answered his very serious question—“Are dinosaurs still alive?”—as if it were the most pressing matter in the world. “They were,” he said with a conspiratorial grin.
“And if I’d been around then, I’d have ridden a T. rex to school.” Lucas snorted with laughter, the kind of squeal that runs through your ribs and makes you forget whatever ache you were carrying. That moment did something to me.
The ease in which Aaron loved my son—without hesitation, without performance—was the first proof I needed that I could breathe again. Aaron stepped into our lives quietly and with intention. He built towers of LEGO with more patience than I knew he had.
He sang terrible made-up songs at bedtime and carried Lucas on his shoulders through the zoo like it was the most natural thing in the world. He was steady in a way I hadn’t allowed myself to hope for. We built a life of small rituals: Saturday pancakes, rainy-day forts, and, slowly, a family whose seams were sewn with kindness.
Which is why the night before Lucas’s sixth birthday is something I still think about—the way it started ordinary and then tore a hole right through the middle of our calm. We’d gone all out for his party. It was a dinosaur theme because Lucas had decided that he would rather live among velociraptors than anything else.
Our living room looked like a prehistoric jungle: green and orange balloons arranged to resemble eggs, streamers twisted into vines, and a glittering gold banner that read, in a ridiculous font, STOMP! CHOMP! ROAR!
LUCAS IS SIX! The cake was the crown jewel—a three-layer T. rex sent from a baker across town who clearly had watched one too many nature documentaries.
It was so lifelike I half expected it to blink. On Saturday morning, while Lucas was at soccer practice, Aaron and I ran a few last-minute errands: extra paper plates, a pack of candles shaped like tiny fossils, and the small cardboard number six that Lucas insisted on carrying to the cashier like it was the holy grail. We left the house locked and hopeful, the living room door latched against curious paws and little eyes.
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