It hit me like a punch. When I was six or seven, I used to slip little crayon doodles under doors throughout the building—stick figures, uneven hearts, suns with jagged rays. I especially left them at her door. She always seemed so alone. She never responded. Never thanked me. I thought she had thrown them away.
But there they were. Preserved. Framed. Arranged carefully, like a small museum of childhood joy.
My throat tightened.
“There’s more,” one officer said softly.
In a corner, under a faded armchair, was a wooden box. Inside were stacks of postcards, handmade holiday cards, and little notes I had nearly forgotten—things I’d handed out at Halloween, Christmas, or just to make someone smile.
She had saved every single one.
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