“I knew her,” I whispered.
Maribel studied me. “Oliver says she’s his mother.”
My knees nearly gave way. I followed her down the hall.
In room twelve, a small boy sat upright in bed, his left wrist wrapped, dark hair clinging to his forehead. His face was pale, his lip split, and his eyes—wide, scared, painfully familiar—locked onto mine the instant I entered.
For a moment, neither of us spoke. Then he whispered, “Nora?”
My mouth went dry. “Yes.”
His chin trembled. “Mom said if anything bad happened, I had to find the lady with two eyes…”
Part 2
I stood frozen in the doorway, convinced I had misheard. “The lady with two eyes?” I repeated.
Oliver nodded, tears gathering but not falling. “She said you were the only person who ever saw both sides of her.”
The words settled deep inside me. Rachel.
At nineteen, Rachel Vance had been the brightest person I knew. She could turn a bad diner into an adventure, a failed exam into a comedy act, and a rainy night into a reason to dance barefoot in the dorm parking lot. But she also carried shadows she never named—days when she vanished, weeks when her laughter rang too loud, bruises she explained too quickly.
I had seen both sides—the charming girl everyone adored and the frightened one who cried in the laundry room because her boyfriend, Mark, had “only grabbed her arm.” I begged her to leave him. She begged me not to interfere.
Then, senior year, I called campus security after hearing screaming from her room. Rachel told everyone I had exaggerated. Mark called me jealous. Our friends chose comfort over truth. Rachel moved out two days later and never spoke to me again.
Now her son was looking at me like I was the last piece of a map.
I stepped closer. “Oliver, where is your mom?”
His face crumpled. “I don’t know.”
Maribel gently explained what they had learned. Oliver had been in the back seat of a rideshare hit by a drunk driver. The driver was injured but alive. Oliver had no phone. In his backpack, police found a sealed envelope, a change of clothes, and my contact card.
“Was your mother in the car?” I asked.
He shook his head. “She put me in it.”
“Where were you going?”
“To you.”
The room seemed to tilt.
Oliver reached for his backpack with his good hand. “She said not to open the letter unless I got scared.”
Maribel looked at me. “We haven’t opened it. We were waiting for a guardian.”
“I’m not his guardian.”
“No,” she said softly. “But right now, you’re the only adult he’ll talk to.”