
đŹ PART 2: «The Niece She Almost Left in the Rain»
Maya stared at the elegant woman kneeling in the dirty water beside her.
For a moment, the city kept moving around themâcar horns, footsteps, umbrellas brushing pastâwhile neither of them could breathe.
âMy mother never said she had a sister,â Maya whispered.
The woman pressed both hands against the heart-shaped pendant at her neck.
âMy name is Evelyn,â she said through tears. âAnna was my little sister.â
Maya shook her head.
âNo. My mother said we had no family.â
Evelyn closed her eyes as if those words physically hurt.
âShe believed that because of me.â
Her little boy stepped close and held out the red rose Maya had given him. Its petals were bent, but still bright against his small hand.
âMommy,â he whispered, âwhy is she crying?â
Evelyn looked at her son, then at the child she had accused and shoved away only moments before.
âBecause I was cruel to someone I should have found years ago.â
Maya quickly gathered her soaked roses into her arms.
âI have to go.â
Evelyn reached toward her, then stopped herself.
âPlease. Just tell me where you live.â
Mayaâs mouth tightened.
âBehind the old laundromat. My grandma is sick. I sell flowers so we can eat.â
Evelynâs shoulders folded inward.
âGrandma?â
âShe raised me after Mom died.â
Evelyn looked terrified now.
âIs her name Margaret?â
Maya nodded cautiously.
The answer seemed to take the strength from Evelynâs body.
âThatâs our mother.â
Maya stared at her.
âMy grandmother is your mother?â
Evelyn began sobbing.
âWhen I was eighteen, I fell in love with a wealthy man my mother did not trust. I ran away with him. His family told me Anna and my mother never wanted to see me again.â She touched the pendant at her throat. âThey returned every letter I wrote unopened.â
Maya tightened her arms around the crushed flowers.
âMy mom cried whenever she talked about rich people,â she whispered. âShe said someone took her sister away and made her forget us.â
Evelyn shook her head desperately.
âI never forgot her. I was told she hated me.â
The little boy tugged gently at Mayaâs sleeve.
âAre you my cousin?â
Maya looked down at him.
He was still wet-faced from crying, still holding the rose she had given him.
She did not know what to say.
Evelyn rose unsteadily.
âTake me to your grandmother. Please.â
Maya hesitated.
âYou called me a thief.â
Evelyn winced.
âYes.â
âYou pushed me.â
âYes.â
âYou ruined the only things I had to sell.â
Evelyn looked at the dripping bouquet with shame.
âI cannot undo that.â
Mayaâs voice grew smaller.
âPeople always hurt us and then say theyâre sorry after they find out we belong to someone important.â
Evelyn began crying harder.
The sentence stripped away every excuse she could have made.
Maya had not become worthy when Evelyn recognized the pendant.
She had been worthy when she protected a lost little boy with empty pockets and wet shoes.
âYou are right,â Evelyn whispered. âI should have thanked you before I knew your name.â
Maya looked away, fighting tears.
The little boy stepped between them and gently placed his bent rose into her arms.
âYou can have mine back,â he said softly.
Mayaâs face crumpled.
She knelt and hugged him before she could stop herself.
âIâm glad you found your mom.â
He held onto her coat.
âI want you to find yours too.â
Evelyn pressed a trembling hand to her mouth.
Then Maya finally led them through the side streets.
Past shops she was never allowed inside.
Past the bakery that sometimes gave her stale bread at closing.
Past the corner where she slept beside her grandmother whenever the shelter was full.
They reached a narrow alley behind an old laundromat.
Beneath a plastic sheet, an elderly woman lay curled on a thin blanket, coughing into a worn scarf.
âGrandma,â Maya whispered, rushing to her side. âIâm back.â
The woman lifted tired eyes.
Then she saw Evelyn standing behind Maya in her cream lace dress, rain streaking her hair, the matching pendant trembling against her chest.
Her breath caught.
âEvelyn?â
Evelyn dropped to her knees.
âMom.â
The old woman began to cry before Evelyn even reached her.
âI wrote to you,â Margaret sobbed. âAnna wrote too. We thought you chose them over us.â
Evelyn took her motherâs cold hands.
âI never saw a letter. They told me you wanted me gone.â
Margaret looked toward Maya.
âAnna died waiting for you to come home.â
Evelyn bowed her head over her motherâs hands and let out a broken sob.
âNoâŠâ
Maya stood very still, holding the crushed roses against her chest.
âShe asked for you at the end,â Margaret whispered. âShe told Maya that somewhere she had an aunt with half a silver heart.â
Evelyn turned toward the girl.
Mayaâs face was wet nowânot from rain, but from tears she could no longer hide.
âMy mother thought you would find me someday,â she said.
Evelyn crawled toward her on the damp ground.
âI should have,â she whispered. âI should have found both of you.â
Maya took one step back.
âAre you going to leave again?â
Evelynâs little boy immediately grabbed Mayaâs hand.
âNo,â he said, as though answering for his mother. âShe canât. I need my cousin.â
A tearful laugh escaped Maya before it turned into a sob.
Evelyn carefully opened her arms.
This time, she did not grab her.
She waited.
After a long moment, Maya stepped into them.
The instant Evelyn wrapped her arms around the thin girl, she felt how cold she was.
How light.
How long she must have been surviving without anyone strong enough to protect her.
âIâm sorry about the flowers,â Evelyn cried into her messy braids.
Maya clutched the lace at her shoulder.
âThey were for food.â
âI know.â
Evelyn looked toward her sick mother, then down at the two children holding each otherâs hands in the rain.
âYou are both coming with me.â
Maya stiffened.
âTo your house?â
âTo your familyâs home,â Evelyn whispered. âAnd tomorrow, we will buy roses for your mother. So many that she will know you finally brought us back together.â
Margaret wept quietly beneath the plastic sheet.
Maya slowly opened her fist.
Inside was one unbroken red rose, protected beneath all the crushed ones.
She placed it into Evelynâs hand.
âMy mother liked red,â she whispered.
Evelyn pressed the rose against her heart.
âSo did I.â
That evening, the boy who had been lost by the roadside sat beside Maya at a warm table while she ate soup slowly, still unable to believe no one would take the bowl away.
Her grandmother rested upstairs beneath clean blankets with a doctor beside her bed.
Evelyn sat across from Maya, watching her with tear-filled eyes.
Maya touched the silver pendant around her neck.
âCan I keep this?â
Evelyn reached beneath her own dress and placed the matching half against it.
The two pieces clicked softly into one complete heart.
âYou kept our family alive with it,â she said. âIt will always be yours.â
Maya looked down at the joined heart, then toward the warm room around her.
For the first time, she did not feel like a poor girl standing outside someone elseâs beautiful life.
She had brought a crying child back to his mother.
And somehow, without knowing it, she had finally led herself home too.
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