“You don’t remember, do you?”
Mika frowned.
“Sorry… have we met before?”
Grace let out a bitter laugh.
“No. You don’t remember. But I remember everything. And now you will remember too.”
Mika sat on a small wooden stool in the tiny room. The air smelled of herbs, smoke, and sickness.
Hope poured water into a cup and set it near her mother’s mat.
“Mommy, drink. You’re sweating again.”
Mika watched in silence, then turned to Grace.
“How did your daughter get that necklace?” he asked softly but firmly.
Grace lifted her eyes, her lips dry. She hesitated, then said, “I found it on the ground near the market.”
Mika leaned forward, staring into her eyes.
“That’s not true. This jewelry is unique. I had only one made. I gave it to someone years ago.”
Grace looked away.
“Maybe I got lucky. Things get lost, you know.”
Her hands trembled slightly.
Mika saw it clearly.
She was hiding something.
Then she began to cough—a deep, painful cough from the bottom of her chest.
Hope rushed to her side, rubbing her back.
“Mommy, rest.”
Mika stood and pulled a thick envelope from his jacket.
“There is money here for medicine, for food.”
Grace pushed the envelope away.
“I do not need your charity.”
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He frowned.
“This is not charity.”
She looked at him, her voice sharp despite her weak body.
“You cannot come back after all this time and try to fix things with money. Keep it.”
Mika said nothing, but inside, he felt the weight of something unfinished.
This woman was hiding a truth.
And he would not leave until he knew it.
Mika came back the next day.
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