Margaret Wilson sat quietly in the passenger seat of her daughter’s car, her weathered fingers folded around a small leather purse resting on her knees. At eighty-three, the auburn hair she once wore proudly had softened into silver, and gentle lines mapped decades of life across her face, each one a record of joy, grief, endurance, and love. Outside the window, familiar streets slipped by—streets she had known for nearly forty-seven years, all leading back to the same modest two-bedroom home that had held her entire adult life. Every crack in the pavement, every corner store, every tree planted along the sidewalks felt like an old friend.
She remembered moving into that house as a young woman, newly married, full of plans and certainty that time would always stretch generously before her. That certainty had faded slowly over the years, replaced by an awareness of how quickly life could shift. She glanced toward Lisa, her adopted daughter, who focused on the road ahead, hands steady on the wheel. Margaret had welcomed Lisa into her life when the girl was just seven years old—quiet, guarded, and carrying a sadness no child should ever have to carry.