the city outside had yet to stir fully awake. Cars passed in half-hearted intervals, and the air still clung to the chill of dawn. Inside,
hm of someone who'd done this a thousand times. Her fingers worked with practiced care, but h
ty-t
never had been. Eleanor, her foster mother and the only real family she'd ever known, used to bake a lemon thyme cake an
he calendar. Another reminder that life was mo
eaked open, and J
w, a regular who wore long scarves year-r
eplied with a warm, pract
r the bucket of fresh marigolds. "Dreamt of my Harold again
one that didn't quite reach her eyes.
rew hummed.
th a burgundy ribbon. Once the sale was done, the woman waved good
he back of the shop. It was her favorite space-quiet, humid, alive. Vines climbed the
f sprouting moonflowers a
s who've never let m
but the silence that
than a scream. The weight of years-of being forgotten, of loving people who left, of fearing she wa
ted her upright. Her sign cle
ped out of the greenhouse, cross
as no o
velope resting o
rt suddenly stutterin
Not
gers under the flap. Inside was a single sheet of thick, cream-colored pape
vited to Bo
Always the same sentence. The same stationery. She had thrown the first one away without opening it. The second, she burned. Th
, something i
ng. Or maybe it was the envelope's weight-it fel
ed the s
lace was filled with secondhand furniture and antique teacups, tiny potted succulents lined a
own. Stared a
opened
d line had appeare
days. No interf
iet intake of breath
ed the pa
er now, she whispe
e's interior had something else-somethin
ssed with gold. El
leep with this un
was
like it might combust. She reached for he
A message from her
rd. Still thinking of y
dn't r
h a dog-eared book, watching dust spin in the sunlit air. Yet the card haunte
mbed into bed, the
g the gold edges. A thousand reasons
nother year of her li
id the card under her pillo
e thought before
this i