When my daughter set up a table to sell her handmade toys, I thought she was just trying to help with my medical bills. But then a stranger arrived on a motorcycle and everything changed. I never expected the truth he brought, or the chance for justice we’d been denied for years.
Five years ago, I would have said hope sounded like Ava laughing in the kitchen. These days, hope looked like my thirteen-year-old daughter at the table, yarn wrapped around her fingers, frowning in concentration. She called it crocheting.
I called it her way of trying to hold our lives together, one tiny animal at a time. I’m Brooklyn, a 44-year-old widow and, for the past year, a cancer patient. My husband, David, died when Ava was two, leaving me with nothing but our house, a pile of bills, and a toddler who still smelled like baby shampoo.
His family stepped in at first. For a week after the funeral, the house was full of sympathy casseroles, offers to help with the paperwork, and whispers that stopped when I walked in. I was barely able to keep myself upright, let alone decipher the stack of insurance forms and legal documents they slid in front of me.
“Just sign here, Brooklyn,” my mother-in-law had said, all brisk comfort and cold hands. “We’ll take care of everything. You need to rest.”
I signed because I didn’t know better and didn’t have the energy to fight.
That was eleven years ago. They faded out of our lives after that, no more surprise visits, no birthday cards, not even a call when Ava started kindergarten. When I found out I was sick, I told myself we’d be okay.
Insurance barely covered half my treatment, and most days it felt like trying to empty the ocean with a teaspoon. Ava was thirteen now, kind, creative, and old enough to notice when I flinched from pain or barely touched my dinner. One afternoon, I came home from chemo and found her on the living room rug, tongue sticking out as her fingers worked the hook.
“Did you make that fox all by yourself?” I asked, easing onto the sofa. She grinned and nodded, holding up the bright orange animal. “It’s for you, Mom.
I wanted it to look happy.”
I let out a soft laugh, the fatigue loosening for a moment. “He looks like he’d cheer anyone up, sweetheart.”
Ava flushed with pride. “Do you really think so?
I keep trying to get the ears right. Grandma says it’s all about practice.”
“They’re perfect,” I said. “And even if they weren’t, I’d love him anyway.”
She smiled.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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