It was a warm, quiet afternoon when I decided to send my husband a quick picture. I was standing beside the truck in a field, enjoying the breeze, and thought he’d appreciate the view.
I snapped the photo and sent it off casually. But his response came almost instantly: “Who’s that in the reflection?”
Confused, I opened the photo again and zoomed in on the rear window. At first, I thought it was just the glare or a tree, but then I saw it—a faint figure, a man with a hat casting a shadow over his face. The hat looked exactly like the one my ex-boyfriend used to wear.
I was alone when I took the picture, wasn’t I? The field was empty, just me and the truck. But the reflection didn’t lie. My heart raced as I texted back, “It’s just a trick of the light. I was alone.”
His response was sharp: “That doesn’t look like a tree. It looks like him.”
My stomach sank. I knew exactly who he meant—my ex, the man I had left behind. I found myself questioning everything. Could he have been nearby? Or was this just an unsettling coincidence?
I tried to call my husband, but he wasn’t convinced. “That reflection doesn’t feel like a coincidence,” he said, his voice distant.
In the days that followed, the tension grew. Despite my attempts to explain, that faint figure in the window lingered in our minds, casting doubt on everything. What should have been an innocent snapshot had opened a door to the past and left our trust fragile, hanging by a thread.