Another tiny cry rises from the backpack, followed by a faint movement under the zipper. Your body makes the decision before your mind does. You shrug off your suit jacket, kneel slowly on the shoulder, and place it on the dirt between you like an offering.
“You don’t have to trust me,” you say. “But the baby needs water, shade, maybe a doctor. You too. So here’s what I’m asking. Let me look. That’s it. Just look.”
She stares at you for so long the air itself seems to hold its breath.
Then, with the care of someone handling glass over concrete, she slips the backpack from her shoulders and lowers it onto your jacket.
The zipper sticks halfway.
Her fingers shake so badly she cannot pull it farther, and finally you ask, “May I?”
She hesitates, then nods once.
When you open the bag, the world changes shape.
Inside, wrapped in a faded dish towel and two child-sized T-shirts, is a baby girl so small she looks unfinished. Her cheeks are flushed with heat. Damp wisps of brown hair cling to her forehead. One tiny hand jerks weakly near her face, and her mouth opens in a thin cry that sounds more like a question than a sound. Beside her are a half-empty baby bottle, two diapers, a pack of crackers, and an envelope thick with folded papers.
For a moment your vision blurs.
Not because you are unused to tragedy. Wealth does not protect anyone from tragedy. It simply teaches people how to hide it behind tinted windows and excellent lighting. No, what breaks something open in you is the way the baby has been packed with such obvious care. Whoever placed her in this bag had almost nothing, and still tried to build a nest out of scraps.
The girl drops to her knees opposite you. “Her name is Lily,” she whispers. “She’s my sister.”
You take out your water bottle with slow, deliberate movements. “What’s your name?”
“Addie.”
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