“I wanted to leave something small enough not to interfere.”
The bell above the diner entrance rang once more.
Claire walked inside.
Richard had texted her from the parking lot, saying only that we needed to talk. She spotted us, then slowed when she noticed the blanket in my hands.
“Why do you have that, Mom?”
She joined us in the booth and looked from Richard to me.
I placed the photograph in front of her.
Claire examined it.
“That’s my blanket.”
Then she looked at Rose.
Rose placed both palms flat on the table.
They were no longer shaking.
“I was one of your nurses, sweetie,” she said. “When you were very small.”
Claire parted her lips but said nothing.
“You kicked one foot free every night,” Rose continued. “You slept when someone hummed. And you gained three ounces the week before you left, which we celebrated with terrible vending-machine cupcakes.”
Claire touched the embroidered flower.
“You made this?”
Rose nodded.
“Why?” Claire pressed.
The diner seemed to grow quieter around the question.
Rose waited before responding.
“Because I got to love you first. Your parents got to love you forever.”
Claire’s hand went still over the stitching.
She moved around the booth and wrapped both arms around Rose.
For half a second, Rose remained frozen, as though she had spent twenty years training herself not to reach for Claire.
Then she embraced her.
When Claire returned to her seat, she touched Richard’s shirt over his heart.
“The tattoo,” she said. “It’s her.”
Richard covered Claire’s hand with his own.
“Every family has someone history almost forgets.” He looked at Rose. “I promised ours never would.”
That evening, I folded Claire’s baby blanket at the dining room table.
Richard stood silently in the doorway.
He did not ask whether I forgave him. He seemed to understand that a secret could begin from something noble and still injure the people excluded from it.
But the meaning of the story had changed.
My fingers rested over the tiny embroidered rose.
For twenty years, I had believed Richard carried another woman above his heart.
Now I understood that he had been carrying gratitude all along.
I smoothed the little flower and placed the blanket inside Claire’s keepsake box.