Seven years after the crash that killed Adira, I was doom-scrolling when her number lit up my phone. A photo appeared—her 16th birthday, frosting on our noses. Then: Check your mailbox. Outside, I found a manila envelope in her handwriting. Inside were old photos of us—and one of me at my cousin’s wedding last year, taken from behind a pillar. My hands shook as I called the number. “Hey,” came her voice. “It’s Adira. Meet me at the lookout.”
At dawn, she was there—older, thinner, alive. “You died,” I whispered. “I was supposed to,” she said.She told me she’d survived the crash, fled in panic, and built new lives in borrowed names. Shame had kept her silent. Now she was dying of leukemia—and had a favor to ask. She drove me to a brick duplex where a woman stood with a little boy.
“This is Layla,” she said softly, “and that’s Kian. My son.” Adira wanted me to keep him safe. Weeks blurred with forms and visits until Kian began calling me Tita Rana. We made a home filled with dinosaurs, brownies, and bedtime candles for the woman who loved us both.
When Adira died, it didn’t feel like an ending. Two years later, Kian hums her songs while building Lego cities. I still visit the lookout, where grief feels like sunlight. Adira wasn’t perfect—but she came home the only way she could: through a child who carries her love forward.