The old woman didn’t answer at first.
She just stared at the broken toy in the boy’s hand, then at the piece in her own palm.
Her lips trembled, but no sound came out.
The boy took one small step closer.
“My mom’s name is Anna,” he whispered.
The woman covered her mouth.
For a moment, she looked like she might fall.
“Anna?” she said, and her voice broke on the name. “My daughter’s name was Anna.”
The boy’s eyes filled again.
“She’s not gone,” he said quickly. “She was on the train with me. She told me to hold the toy and wait, but then the doors closed and I couldn’t see her anymore.”
The old woman grabbed his little shoulders gently.
“What did she look like?”
The boy reached into his pocket and pulled out a folded photo.
It was old and soft at the edges.
A young woman holding a baby.
Beside her stood the same elderly woman, years younger, smiling with the silver necklace around her neck.
The old woman’s breath caught.
“My baby,” she whispered.
Then her eyes dropped to the boy.
“And you…”
He looked up, scared to hope.
“Are you really my grandma?”
The old woman pulled him into her arms so tightly that the broken toy pieces pressed between them.
“I looked for her for fifteen years,” she cried. “I never stopped.”
Just then, across the station, a woman screamed his name.
The boy turned.
His mother was running through the crowd, crying, desperate, alive.
The old woman slowly stood, shaking.
Anna stopped when she saw her.
The whole station seemed to disappear.
The daughter who was lost.
The mother who never gave up.
And the little boy between them, holding the toy that finally brought them home.