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Every afternoon after high school, Thomas strolled down the cobblestone streets with his backpack slung over one shoulder and a wildflower carefully cradled between his fingers.

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Every evening, as he left the grammar school, Thomas walked along the cobbled streets with his satchel slung over one shoulder and a wildflower carefully cradled in his fingers.

**The Flower That Never Withered**

The lanes of St. Michaels always carried the scent of warm bread and damp earth after the rain. It was a small village where everyone knew one another, and secrets travelled swifter than the wind. Among those streets walked a boy of barely twelve, slight of frame with a quiet step beyond his years, his name Thomas Whitaker.

His destination never changed: the Autumn Light Home, an old cream-coloured building with tall windows and a garden brimming with roses. Not a day passed when he didnt step through its rusted gate after school.

He entered slowly, greeting everyoneMrs. Margaret, knitting on the entry bench; old Mr. Albert, who always asked for a sweet; and the staff, who watched him with fondness. They knew Thomas came not out of duty, but for a reason few understood.

Up to the second floor he went, down the hall to room 214. There waited Mrs. Clara Winslow, her hair white as salt, her gaze sometimes distant, sometimes alight.

“Good afternoon, Mrs. Clara,” hed say, setting his satchel aside. “Heres your favourite flower.”
“And who might you be, dear?” shed often ask, smiling softly.
“Just a friend,” hed reply.

Clara had once been a literature teacher, a woman of grace and quiet strength. But bit by bit, her memories slipped away. For her, days blurred, faces grew unfamiliar. Yet when Thomas was there, a spark flickered in her eyes.

For months, he read her poems by Wordsworth and tales by Austen. Sometimes he painted her nails peach, other times he braided her hair with care, as if she were his own grandmother. She laughed at his jokes, wept silently when words moved her, or mistook him for a beau from her youth.

The staff said Thomas had an old soul in a young body. He didnt come for charity or school taskshe came because he wished to.

“That boy… has the kindest heart,” Nurse Martha, the eldest at the home, would say.

**The Secret No One Knew**

All the while, Thomas never revealed that he wasnt merely a “friend” to Clara. He was her grandson. Her only one.

The tale was a sorrowful one. When Claras mind began to fade, her sonThomass fatherhad her placed in the home. At first, he visited often, but in time, his visits dwindled… until one day, he stopped coming altogether. “She isnt the same,” hed say coldly. “Better she stays there.”

But to Thomas, she was still his grandmother. Even if she forgot his name, even if she called him “Edward” or “William,” he knew that somewhere in her mind, love remained.

**The Confession**

One winters day, as he combed her hair by the window, Clara studied him intently. For a moment, recognition flickered in her eyes.

“Youve your fathers eyes,” she whispered.
Thomas smiled. “Perhaps fate lent them to me.”
She leaned in, as if sharing a secret. “My son… he left when I began to forget. Said I was no longer his mother.”

Thomass chest ached, but he didnt correct her. He squeezed her hand.
“Sometimes, when memory fades, people do too. But not everyone forgets.”

She looked at him as if those words brought her peace, then drifted back into her thoughts.

**The Last Summer**

That year, Clara grew frailer. Good days were few, and often she couldnt rise from bed. Still, Thomas visitedreading to her as she slept, leaving fresh flowers on her table.

One afternoon, the homes physician spoke with him.
“Son, your grandmother is fading. She may not last the winter.”
Thomas bowed his head, but he didnt weep. Hed known this would come.

On her last birthday, he arrived with an armful of wildflowers. The room smelled of meadows. She looked at him and, with a clarity she hadnt shown in months, said,
“Thank you for remembering me.”
That was the last day they spoke.

**The Farewell**

Clara passed at dawn. On her nightstand lay a single wildflower, withered yet whole, as if clinging to life until she was gone.

The funeral was simple. Few attendedsome old colleagues, the homes staff… and Thomas. His father arrived late, stiff and dry-eyed.

Nurse Martha, moved, approached Thomas.
“Why did you never stop coming?”
He met her gaze, his eyes red. “Because she was my grandmother. Everyone left when she fell ill. I wouldnt. Even if she didnt know me.”

His father, overhearing, lowered his head in shame. He said nothing, but as the service ended, he clasped Thomass shoulder.
“You did what I couldnt,” he murmured. “Thank you.”

**Epilogue**

Years passed. Thomas grew, finished university, and became a writer. His first book was titled *The Flower That Never Withered*, dedicated to Claras memory.

Inside, he wrote:
*”To my grandmother, who taught me that family isnt bound by memory… but by heart.”*

On the cover, an illustration of a wildflower, just like the ones hed carried to room 214.

And so, though her illness stole names and dates, it could not steal what mattered mostthe love that remains when all else is gone.

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