Hannah was twenty-six years old when her uncle’s funeral ended and the house fell into a silence that felt different from any quiet she’d experienced before.
It was the kind of stillness that signals permanent change, the end of an era.
That’s when Mrs. Patel, their longtime neighbor, approached Hannah with a sealed envelope clutched in her trembling hands.
“Your uncle asked me to give you this after he passed,” the older woman said, her eyes red and swollen from hours of crying.
“And he wanted me to tell you he’s sorry.”
Hannah took the envelope, confused by the message.
Sorry for what?
Hannah hadn’t been able to walk since she was four years old, but her story didn’t begin in a hospital room.
She had memories from before the accident—fragmented but precious recollections of a different life.
She remembered her mother Lena singing too loudly in the kitchen, completely off-key but full of joy.
She remembered her father Mark always smelling like motor oil mixed with peppermint gum after long days at the auto shop.
Hannah had owned light-up sneakers that she’d loved, a purple sippy cup she carried everywhere, and strong opinions about absolutely everything.
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