The afternoon light had grown softer, turning golden as it spilled through the window beside Margaret's chair. The photo album remained open on her lap, forgotten for the moment. Its pages fluttered slightly whenever the air conditioning stirred the room.
Margaret sat quietly, staring out at the trees.
The leaves moved in the breeze.
For a moment, she thought she saw someone standing beneath them.
A young woman.
She blinked.
The figure remained.
Young. Strong. Bright-eyed.
The woman was smiling.
Margaret felt no fear. In fact, she felt something she had not felt in a long time.
Recognition.
The young woman stepped closer.
"Hello, Margaret."
The old woman studied her face.
It seemed familiar somehow.
Not familiar like a memory.
Familiar like a reflection.
The young woman knelt beside her chair and gently took her hand.
Margaret looked down at their fingers intertwined.
One hand smooth.
One hand worn by nearly a century of living.
"Do I know you?" Margaret asked.
The young woman smiled softly.
"You used to."
Margaret frowned, trying to pull a name from the fog.
The effort exhausted her.
The young woman squeezed her hand.
"You don't have to remember."
They sat together in silence.
Outside, a flock of birds crossed the sky.
Their dark shapes moved southward against the afternoon sun.
Margaret watched them disappear beyond the horizon.
"They keep leaving," she whispered.
"Who does?"
"My memories."
The young woman nodded.
"Yes."
"They fly away before I can catch them."
Another flock appeared overhead.
Hundreds of tiny wings beating together.
Heading somewhere distant.
Somewhere warm.
Somewhere beyond her reach.
Margaret's eyes followed them until they vanished.
"I try to hold on," she said.
"I know."
"But they don't stay."
The young woman smiled.
"They were never meant to."
Margaret looked at her.
A faint sadness lingered in her eyes.
"If I lose them all, what will be left of me?"
The question hung in the quiet room.
The young woman thought for a moment.
Then she pointed toward the album.
"Do you remember every day in those photographs?"
Margaret shook her head.
"No."
"Do you remember every birthday?"
"No."
"Every Christmas?"
"No."
"Every laugh?"
"No."
The young woman nodded.
"Yet here you are."
Margaret was silent.
Outside, another bird landed on a branch.
Then another.
Then another.
For a brief moment they rested before continuing their journey.
The young woman continued.
"Your memories were never you."
Margaret looked puzzled.
"They were only visitors."
The words seemed to settle somewhere deep inside her.
"Visitors?"
"You welcomed them for a while. Some stayed for years. Some stayed for moments. But they were always passing through."
Margaret stared at the fading sky.
The shadows in the room had grown longer now.
The corners darkened.
The day was slowly surrendering itself to evening.
"I don't want the darkness," she said quietly.
The young woman looked toward the window.
"The darkness isn't coming for you."
"It feels like it is."
"No."
The young woman gently lifted Margaret's trembling hand.
"The darkness is only where the memories go when their work is finished."
Margaret listened.
Far down the hallway, someone laughed.
A nurse pushed a cart past a doorway.
Life continued its ordinary rhythm.
"You spent so many years gathering memories," the young woman said. "Like seashells on a beach."
Margaret nodded faintly.
"And now the tide is coming in."
The old woman watched the shadows stretching across the floor.
"Will I lose everything?"
The young woman smiled.
"No."
"How do you know?"
"Because I'm you."
Margaret looked closely at her.
For a fleeting instant, the fog parted.
She saw herself as she once had been.
A young mother.
A young wife.
A young woman standing at the beginning of a life she could not yet imagine.
The vision lasted only a second.
Then it faded.
But the warmth remained.
The young woman rose to her feet.
The room seemed dimmer now.
The birds outside were gone.
Only the empty branches remained.
"You should rest," she said.
Margaret tightened her grip on the young woman's hand.
"Will you stay?"
The answer came gently.
"I never left."
A tear rolled down Margaret's cheek.
Not from sadness.
Not entirely.
But from the strange comfort of feeling accompanied on a road she could no longer fully understand.
The young woman leaned forward and kissed her forehead.
Then she stepped backward into the growing shadows.
Margaret watched until she disappeared.
The room was empty once more.
The album sat open upon her lap.
The photographs remained nameless.
The stories remained lost.
Yet as Margaret closed her eyes for a moment, she felt a hand still holding hers.
And somewhere beyond memory, beyond names, beyond the long winter migration of forgotten years, a part of herself walked beside her still, carrying a lantern into the gathering dusk.