I was one of Johns saved babies in Vietnam, but neither of us knew until now

For years, John had been a regular in my office. quiet, courteous, and consistently placing the same order. I thought, Just another customer. I mentioned in passing last week that I was planning a trip to Vietnam with my girlfriend. Everything changed at that point.

His face went cold. He whispered, “I was there.” during Saigon’s collapse. I assisted in getting orphans onto rescue planes. My heart fell. I was adopted as a baby from Vietnam. I informed him.

His hands stopped in mid-stride as he gazed at me, tears welling up in his eyes. He muttered, “Then I might have held you.”

There was silence between us. I was now facing a man whose hands had once saved my life.

We had a lengthy conversation. He recalled the chaos of that day, including the children’s cries, the fear, and the haste to get them on airplanes. He touched my shoulder before he walked away. The knowledge that you made it will help me sleep better tonight.

He turned back just as I thought we were done talking. “There’s another thing,” he muttered. “Something I haven’t shared for decades.”

John leaned back and rubbed his hands together as if he were trying to find the strength to talk. Then he gave me a very vulnerable look.

There, I had a child. in Saigon.

Something weighed down on my chest. “You had a kid?”

He gave a nod. Linh was her name. We fell in love. Our son was born. Everything fell apart when I attempted to take them with me. I didn’t see them again. His voice broke. “I looked for years. Not a record. This, a name, and a vanishing memory.

He produced an old photograph. It depicted him as a young man with a baby next to a dark-eyed, compassionate Vietnamese woman.

He remarked, “I’m not sure if they made it out.” “If they are living at all. However, it would mean the world to me if I could just know that they are alright.

I looked at the picture. The face of the infant. John’s childlike grin. It struck me as more than just a coincidence. “What if I help?” I asked, glancing at him.

Startled, he blinked. “You would do that?”

“My destination is Vietnam. People who track down war families are people I know. Send me the picture. Everything you can recall

John appeared hopeful for the first time since we started talking. We talked about everything for an hour, including Linh’s neighborhood, the hospital where their son was born, and her hairstyle. As though I were carrying his last prayer, I jotted everything down.

I met up with a friend who works as an archivist in Ho Chi Minh City. She copied the picture and gave it to researchers studying the ancestry of veterans. Days went by. Next, a week. Two.

Then the phone rang.

“We believe we have found someone.”

My heart pounded. Bao was the man’s name. Linh was his mother’s name. An American soldier who attempted to take her and her son with him was a topic she frequently discussed. When I knocked on the door, my hands were shaking.

An individual in his late forties responded. He clearly had John’s jawline and Linh’s eyes.

I took a deep breath. “Bao?”

He paused. “Who are you?”

I took out the picture. “I believe this to be your dad.”

Stunned, he stared at it. This is something I’ve never seen before. He was never photographed by my mother. However, she insisted that he tried to stay because he loved us.

“She was correct,” I informed him. “He never gave up trying to find you.”

I gave John a call. His voice was cautious as he replied. “Any updates?”

“I believe I have located your son.”

He remained silent for a few seconds. Then he gave a shaky exhale. “Are you certain?”

“Come and take a look.”

John was clearly shaken when he got off a plane in Vietnam a week later. Bao came cautiously closer. The two men then approached one another until they were standing face to face, drawn together almost like a magnet.

Then, almost half a century later, John gave his son a hug.

Both of them lost it. Bao sobbed in his father’s arms like a little kid. John, who had been silent and stoic, held him and cried.

They told stories over coffee later. John caressed Linh’s face as he held a recent photograph of her, who had died years ago. He declared, “I never stopped loving her.”

As I was leaving Vietnam, they were reclaiming the time that war had stolen by organizing their first trip to America as father and son.

And I took with me something extraordinary: the conviction that love always finds a way to return, regardless of the years that have gone by or the distance between us.

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