By the second week, something stranger began to happen.
At first, the grief was absurdly physical. A hollow ache behind her ribs. She found herself opening her gallery reflexively—waiting for the bus, lying in bed, hiding in the bathroom at a party—only to encounter the void. The thumbnails were grey squares with a sad little cloud icon. Recover? No. Not possible.
She remembered the Menorca cliff not as a golden-hour masterpiece, but as the place where she’d tripped on a loose rock and scraped her knee, and a stranger had offered her a bandage and a piece of chewing gum. She had forgotten the gum. The photo had never captured it.
On the last page, she wrote a letter to her future self: