The room felt smaller the moment Callahan took my hands. For years, I had carried the story of the explosion like a wound that never fully healed. Everyone had called it an accident, and eventually I stopped asking questions because the answers never came. But the look on my husband’s face told me that the worst day of my life had never been as simple as I was told.
“Merritt,” he said quietly, “the explosion was not an accident.” The words left me frozen. Callahan explained that his father had once worked for the gas company responsible for maintaining the lines in our neighborhood. After his father died, Callahan found documents showing that safety warnings had been ignored. There had been reports of a dangerous leak near my home, but repairs were delayed because fixing it would have cost too much.
As he spoke, the truth became harder to bear. The papers showed that people had covered up what happened after the explosion. Records disappeared, families were given false explanations, and blame was quietly pushed away from those responsible. Callahan had spent years collecting proof, but he had been afraid to tell me because he knew it would force me to relive the pain I had spent most of my life trying to survive.
By sunrise, I understood that everything I believed had changed. My scars were not the result of fate or bad luck. They were the result of choices made by people who valued money more than human lives. But for the first time, I did not feel only broken. With Callahan beside me and the truth finally in my hands, I felt ready to stop hiding from the past and make sure it could no longer stay buried.
