The grand ballroom of the Grand Regent Hotel was a sea of shimmering silk, tailored tuxedos, and the soft clinking of crystal glasses. Evelyn stood near the towering marble columns, her emerald-green blazer reflecting the warm glow of the massive crystal chandeliers above. To the world, she was the epitome of success—poised, wealthy, and entirely in control. But beneath the polished exterior, Evelyn had spent years nursing a quiet, hollow ache, a feeling that a vital piece of her own history had been erased long ago. As she leaned against the column, sipping her drink, a sudden commotion broke through the polite murmur of the high-society crowd. A young girl, no older than eight, had somehow slipped past the heavy security at the entrance. Her simple beige dress was smudged with dirt, and her face was streaked with tear-stained soot. She looked utterly out of place among the diamond-encrusted elite, who immediately began to whisper and step away as if her poverty were contagious. The child’s wide, terrified eyes scanned the room until they locked onto Evelyn. Breaking into a desperate sprint, she wove through the startled guests and stopped directly in front of her. In her trembling, dirt-caked hands, she held a worn, vintage leather coin purse.Lamps & Lighting
“Please, give it back. It is not yours,” the girl pleaded, her voice cracking with an urgency that silenced the immediate surroundings.
Evelyn, caught completely off guard, looked down at the frayed leather pouch. A strange, inexplicable jolt of recognition shot through her. Without thinking, she reached out and unclasped the antique metal frame. Inside, tucked away securely where coins used to sit, was a single, faded black-and-white photograph.