I was elbow-deep in dishwater when I saw her through the kitchen window—standing on my porch in a soaked denim jacket, hair plastered to her cheeks, clutching a grocery bag like a shield.
Maya.
The girl who’d sat beside me in AP English.
The girl who’d slipped me a note during prom photos that read: “You’re not invisible. I see you.”
The girl who vanished two weeks after graduation. No calls. No letters. Just silence.
And now, twenty years later, she was here. Shivering. Alone. Eyes wide, as if she wasn’t sure she’d found the right house—or the right version of her own life.
I wiped my hands on my jeans and opened the door.
“Hi,” she said, her voice barely rising above the drumming rain. “I know this is insane. But I drove six hours… and I didn’t know where else to go.”
She didn’t explain why. Not yet. But I saw it in the way her knuckles whitened around that paper bag, in the exhaustion behind her smile, in the quiet tremor of her breath.
So I stepped aside.
“Come in,” I said. “You’re freezing.”

