“If you’ll have a seat, Mr. Patterson?”
“Please, call me Harriman.”
“Harriman. Now tell me, how far back did you want to go?”
“How far back do you have photos?”
“Oh, you should know better than to ask that of a mother.” For a second he looked confused, and I patted his arm. “We took pictures from the day he was born,” I explained as I opened an album. “Our first photo as a family. My brother Bryan took this picture.” It was in my hospital room. I held our son, and Nigel held both of us. Was there ever a baby as welcomed as our son? I smiled and turned the page. “And this was taken the day we brought Quinton home from the hospital.”
I continued turning pages, pointing out pictures of his christening, his first step, his first taste of solid food, his first haircut.
“He doesn’t look happy.”
“No. It was a few years before he could accept the barber shears. And I have to admit, it broke my heart to cut that beautiful hair, but it was time.”