“Jason did that,” she said softly. “He checks it every morning and every night. He sets alarms on his phone so he doesn’t forget.”
“I know,” Dr. Morrison said. “He calls me twice a week with questions.”
A year earlier, Jason could not look up from his phone when his mother tried to show him childhood photos.
Now he used that same phone to make sure she stayed alive.
That did not erase the past.
It did not make the restaurant disappear.
It did not remove the words Amber had spoken or the nod Jason had given.
But healing is not erasure.
Sometimes healing is proof that people can still choose differently after they have failed terribly.
That afternoon, Jason came over with groceries, insulin supplies, and a notebook full of questions for Dr. Morrison. He looked older now. Less polished. More human. He kissed Kathy on the forehead and asked how her foot felt. Then he asked me whether I had taken my afternoon medication.
I almost smiled.
The boy I had protected was learning, late and painfully, how to protect someone else.
That night, after Jason left, Kathy and I sat together by the window while the last light faded across the neighborhood.
“Do you forgive him?” she asked.
I watched the streetlights come on.
“I don’t know,” I said honestly. “Not all the way.”
She nodded.
“Me neither.”
We sat quietly for a while.
Then she reached for my hand.
“But he came back,” she said.
“Yes,” I said. “He came back.”
And for that night, that was enough.