“He looked at this drawing when I mentioned his father.”

My hands began to shake.

This wasn’t random doodling.

It was a way of speaking.

Then a photograph slipped out from between the pages.

It showed Maria years earlier… standing beside my father.

I felt my stomach tighten.

“What is this?” I asked.

Maria’s expression softened.

“Your father hired me.”

“I know that,” I said.

“But not only as a caregiver.”

She took a slow breath.

“He asked me to secretly teach Noah.”

The room suddenly felt smaller.

“When Noah was diagnosed, you focused on doctors and treatments,” she continued. “Your father believed in those too—but he thought Noah needed something else.”

“Freedom.”

“He believed working with his hands might give him a voice.”

She looked down at the broken horse.

“He asked me not to tell you. He thought you were too afraid of disappointment.”

Memories rushed back—how tightly I had clung to every report and prognosis.

I thought I was protecting my son.

But maybe I had been protecting myself.

“The horse you saw was Noah’s most detailed carving yet,” Maria said softly. “He dropped it earlier today. It broke. I was trying to fix it before you saw.”

I returned to Noah’s room.