Emily watched the automatic doors close behind the girl and felt the quiet of the store press in around her. The security cameras, the closing checklist, the fluorescent lights—all of it suddenly felt small compared to the weight of a child trying to bottle a memory before it disappeared. That night, Emily went home smelling faintly of cheap floral perfume and hospital air, unable to shake the image of the girl holding the gift bag like it was life support.
In the days that followed, she began to notice how many people moved through her store carrying invisible stories: the nurse buying energy drinks with swollen eyes, the man counting coins for a single rose, the woman staring too long at sympathy cards. The perfume incident became her quiet reminder that most people are fighting battles no one can see. Sometimes, the smallest act of mercy is the only thing standing between someone and the dark.
