Seven years after the crash that was supposed to take Adira’s life, I was in bed when a message from her old number lit up my phone. It was a photo of us at her sixteenth birthday, laughing, unaware of how everything would change. My heart raced as I typed, “Who is this?” The reply: “Check your mailbox.”
Outside, I found an envelope with my name in Adira’s familiar blue gel pen. Inside were old photos—and a recent one of me at my cousin’s wedding, taken without my knowledge. Panic set in. I called the number, and her voice answered, “Hey. It’s me.”
She asked me to meet her at dawn. I barely slept, torn between hope and fear. When I arrived, she was there—alive, standing next to a silver sedan, unchanged. She told me the truth: she hadn’t died in the crash. After the accident, she fled to escape an older man who caused it, and she vanished, watching my life from afar. Now, she had late-stage leukemia.
There was more. A son, Kian, in foster care. She asked if I’d take him. The next few weeks were a blur of paperwork and new routines, but slowly, Kian became part of my life. Adira’s last months were filled with quiet gratitude.
She passed peacefully, but her love remained. Two years later, Kian is thriving, and we still tell her about our day every night. People disappear, sometimes return, and sometimes love returns in unexpected, fragile forms.