Stuart. His surname. He had no memory of a Margaret or a Thomas. No memory of a stillborn sibling. His parents had died when he was seven—car accident, he’d been told. He was an only child. But the archive did not lie. The ink did not fade.
Roy knelt in the wet grass. He touched the cold granite. And then, like a negative developing in harsh light, the glimpse became a vision. roy stuart glimpse 17
He was a boy again. Seven years old. A hospital corridor that smelled of antiseptic and dread. A door marked 17. Behind it, his mother’s voice, thin as a thread. And his father’s shadow, huge and helpless. They were not in a car accident. They died here, in this room, on this night—June 17th. His mother in childbirth. His father of a sudden, silent aneurysm the moment the doctor said the baby hadn’t made it. Roy had been in the waiting room, eating a melted cheese sandwich, watching the second hand of the clock lurch toward 17 minutes past the hour. Stuart