The knock on our door the morning after prom shattered everything I thought I knew.
One night, a boy made me feel seen on a dance floor.
The next day, police told me he’d been hiding the darkest secret of my life.
I went to prom expecting nothing more than a night to prove I could still show up for my own life.
Instead, a quiet boy named Daniel rolled me onto the dance floor and, without fanfare, handed me back a piece of myself I thought I’d lost in the wreckage years before.
In his steady hands and easy laughter, I felt something I hadn’t felt in a long time: ordinary, unbroken, worthy of being seen.
When I learned he had once dragged my unconscious body from a burning car, the story of my life split in two.
My parents’ death was no longer just an ending; it was also the beginning of a long, hidden courage that had been circling my world for years.
Standing with Daniel on the road where everything burned, I finally understood: my life wasn’t defined by the fire that took them, but by the people who kept stepping into the flames to make sure I got to stay.
