🎬 PART 2: «The Daughter in the Rain»

For one second, she just stared at him.

Then her whole face cracked.

“I know,” she whispered.

The jeweler went still.

Rain rolled down the glass behind them, and the little bell over the door gave one soft shake in the wind.

The young woman’s voice trembled.

“My name is Clara.”

The locket nearly slipped from his hand.

He looked at her properly now. Not at the hoodie, not at the fear, not at the rain-soaked stranger. At her eyes. Her mouth. The way she held her breath when she was trying not to cry.

The same little girl in the photo.

Just older. Hurt. Hiding.

His knees weakened.

“Clara?”

She nodded once, tears spilling now.

“They took me when I was eight,” she whispered. “I kept the locket. I kept your picture. It was the only way I knew I was real.”

The jeweler covered his mouth, already breaking apart.

He had searched for her for years, then buried himself in work when hope became too painful to carry.

“I thought you were dead,” he said.

She shook her head, crying harder.

“I almost was.”

He took one careful step toward her, like she might vanish if he moved too fast.

“Why come back like this?”

Her hand slid down from the door handle to her stomach.

Not empty.

Protective.

“I needed money,” she whispered. “For my little girl. She’s sick. She’s in the car.”

That shattered him completely.

He looked through the rain-streaked window toward the dark street outside, then back at the daughter he had lost and somehow been handed back.

“You were selling the only thing you had left from me,” he said softly.

Clara gave the smallest nod.

“I didn’t think you’d know me.”

The jeweler reached for her face with trembling fingers.

This time, she didn’t pull away.

And when he finally pulled her into his arms, the woman who ran into the shop as a stranger collapsed against him like she had been holding in that cry for half her life.

Then he whispered into her wet hair,

“Take me to my granddaughter.”

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