My stomach dropped.
“Junie… have you ever seen her before today?”
She shook her head.
“No. But she said we should be friends because we look the same.”
That night, I didn’t sleep.
I kept staring at that photo, zooming in, zooming out, trying to find something—anything—that would make it make sense.
But deep down, something was already breaking open inside me.
Something I had buried years ago.
Because six years earlier… I had given birth to twins.
Junie… and Eliza.
Only one of them came home with me.
They told me the other didn’t survive.
Complications.
That was the word they used.
I never saw her. Never held her. Never got to say goodbye.
I just learned how to live with the silence she left behind.
Or at least… I thought I had.
The next morning, my hands were shaking on the steering wheel as I drove Junie to school.
She talked the whole way there, like it was any normal day.
About crayons. About her teacher. About what Lizzy liked to eat.
I barely heard her.
When we got there, she grabbed my hand and pointed.
“There she is.”
I followed her finger.
And everything inside me stopped
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