The visitation room was colder than usual that morning, or at least thatโs how it felt to Michael. The pale walls, the bolted-down chairs, the faint echo of footstepsโeverything about the room reminded him that this was not a place where miracles happened.

It was a place of consequences, of waiting, of regret. He sat at the metal table with his hands folded, eyes fixed on the door, counting the seconds the way he had learned to count years.
When they told him he had a visitor, his heart had jumped despite himself. Only one person ever came anymore.
Her.
When Sarah walked in, he noticed immediately that something was different. She moved more slowly, carefully, as if guarding something precious. She wore a loose coat, and for a brief, hopeful moment, his breath caught in his chest.
Sheโs pregnant, he thought.
The idea hit him so hard it almost hurt. He hadnโt allowed himself to imagine it beforeโnot in here, not with the weight of his sentence pressing on him every day. But now, seeing the way she held herself, the way her hand rested protectively at her side, the thought refused to leave.
They sat across from each other, separated by the same narrow table that had held every difficult conversation theyโd ever had.
โYou look tired,โ Michael said softly.
Sarah smiled, but her eyes were shining. โIโve been busy.โ
He nodded, swallowing. โI thought maybeโฆโ He hesitated, then let out a shaky breath. โI thought you might be expecting.โ
She reached across the table and covered his hand with hers. Her fingers were warm. Real. Steady.
โI was,โ she said gently.
His chest tightened. His eyes filled before he could stop them. โWas?โ
Before he could ask another question, the door behind her opened.
A guard entered, pushing a stroller.
Michaelโs mind couldnโt process what he was seeing. The stroller rolled closer, and inside, wrapped in soft blankets, were two tiny faces. Two. Small. Perfect. Sleeping peacefully, unaware of the concrete walls, the bars, the past that surrounded them.
Sarah stood and moved to the stroller, her voice trembling with emotion.
โMichael,โ she said, barely holding herself together, โmeet your sons.โ
The room disappeared.
The walls. The guards. The years he had hardened himself just to survive. All of it vanished in an instant.
He stood up so fast his chair scraped loudly against the floor. His knees gave out, and he grabbed the table to steady himself, staring at the babies as if they might disappear if he blinked.
โSons?โ he whispered. โPlural?โ
Sarah laughed through tears. โTwins.โ
Michaelโs hands began to shake. His lips trembled, and then something inside him broke openโsomething that had been locked away since the day he was sentenced. His shoulders collapsed inward, and a sound escaped his chest that he didnโt recognize at first.
It was a sob.
The first real one in years.
โI wasnโt sure theyโd let me bring them,โ Sarah said, her voice breaking. โBut I asked. And I waited. And todayโฆ today they said yes.โ
Michael covered his face with his hands, crying openly, uncontrollably. The guards didnโt interrupt. One of them even turned away, giving him a moment of dignity he hadnโt expected to find in this place.
โI thought Iโd never see them,โ he said between breaths. โI thought Iโd only ever be a name on paper. A story youโd tell them one day.โ
Sarah knelt beside him, guiding his hands gently toward the stroller. โTheyโre real,โ she whispered. โAnd theyโre here.โ
He touched one tiny hand with a single finger, afraid of how fragile it felt. The baby stirred slightly, curling his fingers around Michaelโs fingertip.
Michael froze.
โHeโs holding me,โ he whispered in disbelief.
The second baby shifted too, making a small sound, and Sarah laughed softly. โThey both do that. They like to hold on.โ
Michael dropped to his knees fully now, tears streaming freely down his face. โI donโt deserve this,โ he said. โI donโt deserve you. Or them.โ
Sarah shook her head firmly. โThey donโt need perfection. They need truth. And love. And a father who wants to be better.โ
He looked up at her, eyes red, voice raw. โI swear to youโฆ I will be. For them. For you. Iโll be someone they can be proud ofโeven if it takes the rest of my life.โ
Sarah brushed her thumb across his cheek. โThatโs all I ever wanted.โ
When the guard finally cleared his throat, signaling that visitation time was nearly over, Michael felt the familiar panic rise in his chest.