In the principal’s office, time seemed to stop. Letty stood beside Millie, who now wore the wig made from my daughter’s hair. The shy, sick girl who had hidden in bathroom stalls was studying her reflection with a hesitant, astonished smile. Around them, Jonathan’s former coworkers watched in silence, some wiping their eyes, as if they were seeing him again through our child.
When they handed me the envelope, my fingers shook. Jonathan’s familiar handwriting pulled the air from my lungs. In his letter, he wrote of Letty’s enormous heart, of a future moment when her kindness would light up a room—and how, when that day came, I must let love in instead of hiding in grief. His coworkers then announced a fund in his name to help families facing cancer, turning our private pain into a lifeline for others. Walking out of the school, Letty clutching her father’s old hard hat, I realized our little family wasn’t broken; it was still growing around the love he’d left behind.
