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She Remembered What Everyone Else Forgot

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“It reminded me I mattered. That someone believed in me.”

I couldn’t speak.

Then she asked, “Want to get coffee sometime?”

I nodded. “Of course.”

Coffee turned into dinner. Dinner into walks. Walks into movie nights. And one evening, I finally said what I’d been holding onto for years:

“You were my favorite person back then. And I think you still are.”

She blushed. “You were the first person who made me feel important.”

We didn’t say much after that. We just held hands.

Life was gentle for a while. We worked weekends together. Amy kept her shifts. Then her mom got sick — pancreatic cancer, late stage.

“I just got her back,” she sobbed into my shirt.

She moved in to care for her full-time. I visited often, brought food, helped where I could. Watching Amy care for her mom broke something in me — in the best way. She was graceful, patient, fierce.

One night on the balcony, she asked, “Do you think life balances itself out?”

I nodded. “You get back what you give.”

“Exactly,” she said. “I got love when I needed it most. Now I’m giving it.”

Her mother passed quietly weeks later.

At the funeral, Amy read a poem she’d written in high school — about hope, survival, and unseen hands that lift you when you’re falling. Everyone cried.

Afterward, she asked me to move in.

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