Second Tide is a novel about survival, disappearance, and the quiet moral reckoning that follows when a life refuses to stay buried.
After a boating accident off the coast of Brazil leaves him presumed dead, Ethan Hale is given an unasked-for second life. Rescued by a small fishing village, he begins again under a borrowed name, learning a slower rhythm shaped by tides, labor, and human kindness. What starts as recovery becomes something more complicated: a life built in absence of the one he left behind.
Back in Chicago, his wife Claire and their children grieve a loss that time does not neatly resolve. When Ethan is finally forced to confront the truth of his survival, reunion offers no easy redemption. Healing carries consequences. Forgiveness is uncertain. And presence, once restored, demands choices that cannot be undone.
Quiet, reflective, and emotionally precise, Second Tide explores the ethical weight of disappearance, the limits of forgiveness, and the question at the heart of every second chance: What do we owe the lives we leave behind-and who are we allowed to become once we survive?