For twenty years, my husband claimed the woman tattooed above his heart had never truly existed. I nearly believed him—until an old photograph slipped from a hidden compartment in his garage, and the six words written on the back led me toward someone I had never been meant to find.
The photograph slid from beneath a loose panel in Richard’s toolbox and landed face-up on the garage floor.
At first, all I noticed were its faded, yellowing edges.
Then I saw the woman.
She was younger than the face tattooed across Richard’s chest, but the eyes matched.
So did the tiny rose behind her left ear.
She held a premature infant inside a neonatal unit.
Her eyes were not on the camera. She was gazing down at the baby with complete tenderness.
On the back, Richard had written six words.
“Forgive me, Rose. She can’t know.”
Twenty years earlier, during our honeymoon, Richard had walked out of the hotel bathroom with a towel wrapped around his waist.
It was the first time I had seen him shirtless long enough to notice the tattoo.
A beautiful young woman looked up from his chest.
Dark hair fell over one shoulder.
Behind her ear was a rose no larger than a thumbnail.
“Who is she?” I asked.
Richard glanced down as though he had forgotten the tattoo existed.
“Nobody.”
“Nobody gets tattooed over your heart, Richie.”
He laughed and pulled me into his arms. “She’s nobody you know. I had it done years ago.”
I trusted him completely.
I held onto that explanation through five unsuccessful fertility treatments. I clung to it again when the doctor gently advised us to stop trying.
But I believed him most deeply on the morning we carried home a premature baby girl with dark eyes, a fierce cry, and a cream-colored blanket tucked around her tiny legs.
I searched the toolbox once more.
Beneath a tray filled with screws, I discovered a black address book with a cracked spine.
Nearly every number had been crossed out, but one name remained untouched.
Rose.
My thumb hovered over the number.
Then I called from our landline.
The phone rang five times.
“Hello?” a woman answered.
Her voice sounded older and guarded.
Silence stretched between us.
“Richard?” she whispered, apparently recognizing the number. “Is that really you?”
I tightened my grip on the receiver’s tangled plastic cord.
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