That night, I sat on my porch with a glass of wine and looked out over my garden. Roses climbed the fence. Lavender spilled over the borders. The air smelled like summer and dirt and growth.
My phone buzzed. A text from Jennifer asking about drinks.
I smiled.
Three years after the lottery, a young woman stood in front of me at the counter, her hands shaking slightly as she pulled a crumpled ticket from her bag.
“I just won fifty thousand dollars,” she whispered. “And I’m scared my family will take it.”
I looked at her and saw myself, sitting in my car, heart racing, instinct screaming to hide.
“Come sit,” I said.
We talked for hours. About boundaries. About protection. About choosing yourself even when it feels wrong.
When she left, she had a plan. And hope.
That night, I locked up the bookstore and stepped into the cool air, stars scattered overhead.
They had burned a check once, thinking it would destroy me.
Instead, it freed me.
I was never just the money.
I was the woman who learned she was allowed to leave, allowed to choose, allowed to build something better.
And that made all the difference.
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