It started as just another routine moment. I was on my lunch break, patrolling my usual route, when I saw her—frail, cane in hand, hesitating at the crosswalk. Without thinking twice, I offered my arm and walked her across, steady and slow, like I’ve done for so many others before.
She thanked me sweetly, but as we reached the other side, she paused, looked me straight in the eye, and said, “You still wrinkle your nose when you’re confused, just like when you were little.”
My heart stopped. I stared at her, caught completely off guard. “I’m sorry… do I know you?” I asked.
She smiled, took a deep breath, and said, “I used to watch you after school, Marcus. You had a stuffed lion named Samson and hated vegetables with a passion.” She wasn’t wrong. That lion went everywhere with me.
And the veggies? Still not a fan. I couldn’t believe it.
Thirty years had passed since I’d last heard anyone mention Samson. My parents had never been the most attentive, so they’d hired a babysitter when I was a kid. But my memory of those years was fuzzy at best.
I remembered cartoons, orange juice boxes, and Samson, but not her face. “Wait,” I said slowly, “what was your name?”
Her lips curved into a soft smile. “Clara.”
I laughed nervously.
“I—I can’t believe this. You actually remember me?”
“How could I forget?” she said, her eyes glimmering. “You were my favorite little rascal.
Always asking questions. Always worried I’d leave before your parents came home.”
I didn’t know what to say. For years, I’d convinced myself my childhood hadn’t left much of an impression on anyone.
Yet here was Clara, holding pieces of me I’d forgotten. We stood there awkwardly for a moment, people passing us by, the hum of the city swirling around. Finally, she asked, “Do you have time to join me for tea?
I live just around the corner. I’d love to catch up.”
I hesitated. Lunch break wasn’t endless.
But something in her voice tugged at me. Maybe it was guilt, or maybe curiosity. I nodded.
“Sure. Let’s go.”
Her apartment was a modest, lived-in space, filled with shelves of books and photographs. The smell of lavender floated in the air.
She moved slowly but with purpose, guiding me to the kitchen where she set out mismatched mugs and a plate of shortbread cookies. As we sat, she asked about my life—work, family, relationships. I told her I was divorced, no kids, still trying to figure things out at forty.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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