The Stranger at My Wife’s Grave:

He would sit cross-legged beside her headstone, hands resting on the grass, head bowed.

After an hour, he’d press his palm gently to the stone, stand, and leave.

I began watching him from my car, hidden behind the row of old pines.

The quiet devotion unsettled me. Who was this man? Why did he come here every week — to her?

Sarah had been gone fourteen months. Breast cancer took her at forty-three.

We’d been married twenty years — a good, simple life, built around our kids and her work as a pediatric nurse.

She was the most ordinary miracle I ever knew — the kind of woman who saw goodness in everything.

But nothing about her connected to a leather-clad biker with tattooed arms and steel in his eyes.

And yet, there he was. Every Saturday. Grieving like he’d lost the love of his life.