Part 2: The Ghost from the Past
The silence that fell over the small corner of the auditorium was sudden and suffocating. My advisor, Dr. Arthur Vance—a man renowned for his unflinching composure and sharp, analytical mind—stood frozen. The hand he had extended to congratulate my stepfather remained suspended in mid-air, trembling slightly. The color drained from his face so rapidly that for a terrifying second, I thought he was having a stroke.
His eyes, wide and completely unguarded, locked onto my stepfather’s weathered face. He scanned the deep wrinkles around my dad’s eyes, the sun-damaged skin, and the jagged scar running along his jawline.
“Julian?” Dr. Vance whispered, his voice cracking, stripped of all its usual academic authority. “Is that… is that really you?”
I looked at my stepfather, expecting him to chuckle, shake his head, and explain that he was just a simple construction worker from a small town who happened to look like someone else. But he didn’t.
Instead, my dad’s posture changed entirely. The slight, humble slouch he always wore—the physical burden of carrying heavy concrete and drywall for twenty-five years—vanished. His shoulders squared. His jaw tightened. The timid, out-of-place country man who had been nervously adjusting his borrowed tie just moments ago was gone. In his place stood someone cold, intensely focused, and dangerously calm.
“Hello, Arthur,” my dad said. His voice wasn’t the warm, gravelly tone that had cheered me on through my late-night study sessions. It was low, freezing, and carried a weight that terrified me. “It’s been a long time.”