In a Crowd of Hundreds Waiting for a Blessing, the Pope Stopped for One Father Who Had Buried His Son That Morning-luna

Mark did not mean to open the funeral program.

He had only lifted it because the Pope had asked to see his son’s face.

That should have been enough.

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One look. One blessing. One small mercy on a day that had already taken too much from him.

But when Mark’s fingers touched the paper, the fold gave way.

The program opened in his shaking hands.

Inside, tucked between the printed order of service and a photo of Caleb at Lake Erie, was a small sheet of notebook paper.

Mark froze.

He knew that paper.

It was blue-lined, torn from one of Caleb’s college notebooks, folded twice, with a crease down the middle.

His daughter, Emma, saw it first.

Her hand tightened around Caleb’s Cleveland Guardians cap.

“Dad,” she whispered.

Mark could barely hear her over the crowd.

But he heard the way her voice broke.

That note had not been in the program that morning.

At least Mark did not remember seeing it.

He remembered the chapel.

He remembered the cold floor under his dress shoes.

He remembered his wife, Lisa, standing beside the coffin with both hands flat against her stomach.

He remembered Caleb’s cap resting on the lid like a thing waiting to be picked up again.

He remembered the priest saying gentle words that floated past him without landing.

But he did not remember the note.

Now it sat in his hands in the middle of St. Peter’s Square.

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