Almost a year after my teenage son disappeared, I saw a homeless man walk into a café wearing my son’s jacket — the one I had patched myself. When he said a boy gave it to him, I followed him to an abandoned house. What I discovered there changed everything I thought I knew about my son’s disappearance.

He nodded.

Just then the barista handed him his order. A businessman and a woman in a skirt stepped between us. When I moved around them, the old man had already disappeared.

I scanned the café and spotted him stepping onto the sidewalk.

“Wait, please!” I hurried after him.

I tried catching up, but the sidewalk was crowded. People moved aside for him, but I struggled to push through.

After two blocks, I realized something strange.

The old man wasn’t stopping to ask for money. He hadn’t eaten the bun or touched the tea.

He was walking with purpose.

My instincts told me not to catch him — but to follow him.

So I did.

I trailed him all the way to the outskirts of the city.

He stopped outside an old abandoned house, surrounded by overgrown weeds and bordered by woods behind it. The place looked forgotten.

The old man knocked softly.

I crept closer. When he glanced around, I ducked behind a tree.

The door opened.

“You said I should tell you if someone ever asked about the jacket…” the old man said.

I peeked around the tree.

When I saw who stood in that doorway, my knees nearly gave out.

“Daniel!” I rushed forward.

My son looked up. Fear filled his eyes.

A shadow shifted behind him. He glanced back over his shoulder — then looked at me again and did the last thing I expected.

He ran.

“Daniel, wait!” I sprinted past the old man and into the house.