My brother vanished thirteen years ago.

**The Man in My Brother’s Jacket**

My brother vanished thirteen years ago.

He was twenty-two, restless, bright, with a laugh that echoed down hallways. One morning, he grabbed his jacket—the old denim one with the stitched patches and frayed sleeves—and said he was heading out for a drive.

He never came back.

We searched. For months. Then for years. Fliers, phone calls, billboards, interviews with strangers who *might* have seen him. Every new lead collapsed into nothing. Eventually, hope thinned into something quiet and painful, like a bruise that never healed.

Last night, driving home late from work, I stopped at a gas station off the highway. I barely noticed the man walking past me—until I saw the jacket.

**My brother’s jacket.**

The same patches we’d sewn on as kids: the crooked lightning bolt, the faded tiger. The left sleeve, worn thin from years of guitar playing.

My heart slammed against my ribs.

I turned and shouted before I could think:

“**Adam!**”

The man froze.

He turned slowly, his face draining of color as if I had spoken a secret name. His eyes widened—not in confusion, but recognition.

My phone buzzed loudly in my pocket, vibrating against my leg, but I didn’t look away from him.

“Where did you get that?” I whispered.

He swallowed hard. “I… I can explain.”

My phone vibrated again. This time I glanced at the screen.

A message from an unknown number:

**DO NOT TRUST HIM.

HE HAS MY PHONE. I’M SAFE.

COME TO MEET POINT — 7 MILES NORTH.

— ADAM**

My knees nearly buckled.

I looked back at the man. His expression changed—nervous, calculating. Without another word, he bolted toward a car parked at the edge of the lot.

I didn’t chase him.

I ran for mine.

## **Seven Miles North**

The “meet point” turned out to be an abandoned rest stop beside a wooded trail. My headlights swept across cracked pavement and overgrown grass.

Then I saw him.

Leaning against a lamppost, thin but unmistakably him. Older, beard scruffy, eyes tired—but alive.

“Adam,” I breathed.

He stepped forward slowly, as if worried he might scare me.

But then we collided—arms tight, clinging, both of us shaking.

“I thought you were dead,” I choked out.

“I almost was,” he murmured. “But I escaped. I’ve been hiding. That man took my jacket months ago. He stole my phone. I’ve been trying to get word out…”

His voice broke.

“I didn’t think anyone would ever find me.”

I pulled back and held his face in my hands.

“You found *me*,” I said. “That’s all that matters.”

## **The Aftermath**

The police picked up the man wearing the jacket an hour later. He wasn’t the only one involved—Adam had stumbled into something criminal thirteen years ago, something that didn’t want to let him go. But now, with his testimony and the investigation reopened, everything began to unravel.

In the weeks that followed, we rebuilt slowly.

Adam moved in with me at first. He kept the jacket—it was battered, stretched, and smelled faintly of gasoline, but it was his.

Sometimes I’d catch him standing by the window, running his fingers over the patches. And he’d smile.

“It’s strange,” he told me one night. “For years I imagined this moment. Coming home. Being found. I didn’t think it would ever happen.”

I leaned my head on his shoulder.

“You’re home now,” I said. “For good.”

His arm tightened around me.

And for the first time in thirteen years, the bruise of loss finally began to heal.

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