Part 2: The man heard her clearly.

And now he understood why his stomach had turned the moment he saw the photograph.
The little girl clutched it tighter. “You know my mom?”

The elderly woman did not answer right away. She was still staring at the child’s hands, at the doll, at the old fold lines in the picture — like each one carried a memory she had spent years trying to bury.

The man stepped closer. “What do you mean it was cut?”

The woman looked at him sharply, as if only just noticing he existed.

Then her gaze dropped back to the child.

“Who gave you that?” she asked.

“My mom,” the girl whispered. “She said if I saw the ring, I had to show you.”

The old woman shut her eyes.

The man held out a hand. “Let me see it.”

After a long second, the little girl passed him the photograph.

Up close, it was obvious: one side had been trimmed away with scissors. The woman in the photo was visible. The ring was visible. The hospital bed was visible.

But whoever had once stood on the other side had been deliberately removed.

The man looked up. “Who was cut out?”

The elderly woman’s face changed again — not panic now, but defeat.

“The wrong person,” she said softly.

The little girl’s lips trembled. “My mom said you would know.”

“I do,” the woman replied.

The child took one tiny step closer. “Where is she?”

The old woman’s eyes filled.

“She ran before dawn,” she said. “That was the last smart thing she did.”

The man’s voice hardened. “Ran from who?”

The woman looked at the ring on her own hand, then at the photo in his fingers.

Finally she said, “From the man standing beside that hospital bed before your mother cut him out.”

The little girl went still.

The man turned the photograph over.

There, almost invisible under the crease, were four faded words written in hurried ink:

Not his. Keep running.

He looked up in shock.

The elderly woman whispered, “Your mother wasn’t showing you who to find.”

The child stared at her.

“She was showing you who to avoid.”

And then all three of them heard the same thing at once:

a car door closing across the street.

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