The old woman’s eyes filled, but she did not answer with words.
Instead, she reached beneath the pastry tray and pulled out a faded blue ribbon tied around a tiny brass key. The man stared at it as if the street had cracked open beneath him.
“I wore that,” he whispered.
She nodded slowly.
“You cried when they took it from your wrist.”
The woman in the tan coat covered her mouth, realizing this was not a mistake. This was a life returning in the middle of a cold street.
The man’s voice broke.
“They told me you abandoned me.”
The old vendor shook her head.
“I searched every station. Every orphanage. Every winter.”
She placed the key in his palm.
“It opened our room above the bakery.”
He looked toward the old stone building behind her.
In the upstairs window, faded but still there, was a child’s drawing taped to the glass.
His drawing.
The man looked back at her, shattered.
“You kept it?”
She touched his cheek and whispered:
“I kept everything.”