Two years later Annie turned six. Braids framed a calmer face, and her backpack had a cat on it. At school it was free-drawing day. While classmates sketched pets and superheroes, Annie drew a tall man holding a red balloon looking up at the sky and a little girl beside him.
Mary came over. “Who is this, Annie?” “My dad,” she said quietly. “He’s watching me grow.” Katherine arrived early that afternoon to pick her up. As they walked through the park, past the bench where Andrew used to sit reading, Annie asked, “Do people ever really go away if we remember them?”
Katherine stopped and looked at her granddaughter. “Why do you ask?” “I dreamt Daddy on a cloud,” Annie said. “He waved and said, ‘Thanks for not being afraid to tell the truth.’ Then he sailed away, but his shadow stayed.” Katherine hugged her tightly. “Remembering keeps people with us.”
That night Annie wrote in a little notebook: “People think I’m too young to know. But I know. I keep Daddy with me by remembering him. He used to be cold, but now he’s not. He lives in my smile every day.”
