The little girl looked down at her foot, then back at the woman.
“I don’t know what you mean,” she whispered.
The woman’s hands shook so badly the hospital card almost fell again.
“What’s your name?”
The girl hesitated.
She had learned that adults could turn any answer into trouble.
“Lily.”
The woman’s breath caught.
A sound came from her throat, small and broken.
“No… my baby was named Lily.”
The crowd around them went silent.
The girl clutched the edge of her torn dress.
“I live near the bus station,” she said. “An old woman raised me until she got sick. She said she found me wrapped in a blanket.”
The woman covered her mouth.
Her eyes searched the girl’s face now, not with suspicion, but with horror.
A tiny scar near her eyebrow.
The same soft eyes.
The same birthmark from the hospital card she had kept hidden in her wallet for seven years.
“I was told you died,” the woman whispered.
The girl’s lips trembled.
“Did someone throw me away?”
The woman dropped to her knees right there on the expensive shopping street.
Her luxury coat touched the dirty pavement, but she didn’t care.
“No,” she cried. “No, sweetheart. I looked for you in every child I passed.”
The girl stood frozen, afraid to believe her.
Then the woman reached out slowly.
This time, she didn’t grab her.
She asked with shaking hands.
“Can I hold you?”
The little girl stared at her for a long second.
Then she stepped forward.
And the woman who had accused her in front of everyone broke down holding the daughter she thought she had buried.