Richard feels the room tilt as the word “son” sinks in. The younger man—Simon—stares between them, his jaw tight, eyes searching Richard’s face for something familiar. Vanessa’s voice shakes as she reaches back across five decades, to a strict home where pregnancy meant exile, to parents who forced her to disappear and “fix” the problem alone. She tells them how she carried Simon in secret, how every letter she wrote to Richard was burned before it left the house, how fear and obedience hardened into silence.
Now, at seventy-five, Richard is handed an entire life he never knew he’d missed. He wrestles with fury at Vanessa, grief for lost years, and shame at the ease with which he believed the worst of her. Simon speaks at last—hurt, hopeful, angry—admitting he grew up believing his father simply didn’t want him. Richard doesn’t defend himself. Instead, he asks for a chance. Not to rewrite the past, but to claim whatever time is left. He invites Simon to dinner, then to many more, urging both him and Vanessa to stop punishing themselves and start, however awkwardly, again.