Mary Lou stood still. I saw her hand tremble — not from fear, but because the pain had finally found a name. “Do you know what I regret most?” she asked him. He waited. “It’s not those twelve years. It’s that I believed I didn’t deserve another life.” He looked up at her. No one spoke. The wind came through the open door. The soup smelled the same as it always did. Mary Lou took a breath. “I don’t hate you anymore,” she said. Then: “But there’s nothing left between us either.” He nodded and didn’t argue. He turned around and left slowly, like someone losing something important but no longer having the right to keep it.
When the door closed, I went to my daughter and took her hand. “Are you okay?” She smiled — a real smile, the kind I had been waiting twelve years to see again. “I am now, Mom.” That night the restaurant was fuller than ever. It eventually got a name. People started calling it The Second Life, and it fit. One morning I opened the door and found my daughter standing in the sunlight. No hurry. No fear. Just breathing. “Mom,” she said. “If you hadn’t come that day, I would still be there.” I stayed quiet. She looked at me. “Thank you for not leaving me alone.” I held her without crying, without making any speech. Just peace.