I bought an old camera at a flea market just to cheer myself up, then found an undeveloped film inside. When I saw the photo, I had no choice but to confront my mom about a truth she’d buried. I lived in a small apartment with my cat, Waffle, and my Mom.
Really, it’s always just been the two of us. Me and her. I studied law, just like she wanted.
Got my degree, passed the bar, even started practicing. I was always fighting her for the right to quit that path and devote myself entirely to photography, the one thing that made me feel alive. I never understood why photography triggered her so much.
It was like a switch flipped in her every time I brought it up. “This isn’t a profession, Amber! You have a career — stick to it.”
“Mom, my hobby turned into something real.
It brings in money. And joy.”
After conversations like that, I usually ended up wandering through the flea market. And that day was one of those days — itchy, and hollow.
I drifted between old typewriters, ceramic cats, and dusty floral hats that smelled like other people’s memories. Then I saw an old film camera, half-hidden under a stack of vinyl records. I pointed at the camera, wrapped in a cracked leather strap.
“Fifteen, if you’re not gonna haggle,” the seller said, smiling through a thick mustache. I smirked, handing him the cash. “I don’t bargain with fate.”
I bought it more for decoration than anything else.
But when I got home and opened the back panel, something clicked. I pulled out the film. It was real.
I rushed to the one photo lab in town that still developed film. The lab tech was a skinny guy with neon-green nail polish and a suspicious glance. “Kept a roll in a drawer for ten years and suddenly remembered it?
Is this a new trend?”
“Ah, in that case,” he smirked, “come back tomorrow.”
***
The next day, I stood outside the lab holding the envelope. My fingers trembled just a bit. I peeled the flap open, took out the prints.
The first photo — an amusement park. A carousel. It hit me in the gut.
Next photo… Same floral sundress. Same photo.
The one from our family album. Mom always said it was my favorite. But on that one, I wasn’t with her.
I stood in front of the entrance to a ride, holding hands with a man. Not Mom. A man!
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
