“I’m on my way,” she answered instantly without hesitation.
My sister owned a salon across town and could leave whenever she wanted.
She arrived quickly.
The moment Judy stepped inside the storage unit, she froze in the doorway.
“Oh, honey…” she whispered.
I shook my head, unable to process it. “She… she did all this…”
Judy wrapped me in a hug, and I clung to her like I might fall apart if I let go.
“We’ll go through it together,” she promised.
And that’s exactly what we did.
We opened the second box.
“Care Plans” was written neatly across the top.
Inside were printed schedules.
– Morning routines.
– Meal suggestions.
– Notes reminding me to go outside.
Sticky notes were tucked between the pages.
“Eat something warm today. I’ll feel better knowing you did.”
“Don’t skip breakfast again.”
There were cookbooks too, pages marked carefully with notes in the margins. I pressed one tightly against my chest.
“My baby thought of everything…” I whispered.
Judy squeezed my shoulder gently.
The third box was labeled “People You’ll Need.”
Inside was a list of names.
– Neighbors.
– Ava’s mother.
– Ms. Holloway and Mr. Bennett.
Beside every name, Lily had written notes explaining why they mattered and when I should reach out to them.
Judy exhaled softly. “Lily really didn’t want you to feel alone.”
The fourth box was different.
“Memories You’ll Forget First.”
I didn’t think forgetting her was possible. But once I opened it, I realized she was right.
There were photos I’d never seen before.
Lily laughing in the kitchen. Sitting cross-legged on the floor while reading.
Some photos had notes attached.
“This was the day you burned the pancakes, and we laughed for 30 minutes.”
A shaky laugh escaped through my tears.
“I forgot about that…”
My sister smiled softly. “She didn’t.”
The fifth box frightened me a little.
“The Hard Truth.”
I hesitated before opening it.
Inside was a journal filled entirely with Lily’s handwriting.
She wrote about doctor appointments, days when she felt weaker, and the way she could see fear in my face even when I tried hiding it.
“She knew…” I whispered.
Judy nodded quietly.
Lily had written about me too.
About how I kept insisting everything would be okay. About how I refused to face the truth because I couldn’t survive it.
“Lily didn’t want me to fall apart…” I whispered, my voice breaking apart.
That was when I lost control again.
I turned and buried my face against Judy’s shoulder, sobbing harder than I had in weeks.
And for the first time since Lily died…
I stopped trying to hold everything inside.
I don’t know how long Judy held me.
She never rushed me. She simply stood there, steady and patient, letting me cry in a way I hadn’t allowed myself to since losing Lily. Eventually, I pulled away and wiped my face.
Then something suddenly occurred to me.
“Ju… how did you know which storage facility to come to?” I asked slowly. “I never gave you the address.”
She hesitated before sighing softly.
“It took you a while,” she said with a faint smile. “I helped Lily organize all of this for months. She insisted.”
I stared at her.
“You knew?”
My sister nodded. “Li came to me about six months ago. She said she needed help with something important. At first I thought it was school-related, but then she showed me her plan. She used her birthday money and what she earned babysitting Mrs. Greene’s son downstairs. I helped pay for the storage unit.”
I looked around again, overwhelmed all over again.
“She made me promise not to tell you,” Judy explained. “She said you weren’t ready yet.”
I let out a shaky breath. “She was right.”