My son held it up between them.
It was one of the sweaters.
Not cut. Not unraveled.
Whole.
Claire’s hands started to shake. “Where did you get that?”
My son didn’t answer right away.
He just looked at her in a way I hadn’t seen before. Not defensive. Not unsure.
Clear.
“You said these didn’t belong here,” he said calmly. “So I figured maybe something else doesn’t either.”
Claire blinked, confused. “What are you talking about?”
He stepped closer.
“This,” he said, lifting the sweater slightly, “was the last thing she made before she got sick. Liam kept it hidden because he knew you didn’t like them.”
Claire’s mouth opened, but no words came out.
“And those bunnies you just threw away?” he continued, his voice tightening, “that was him trying to turn grief into something good.”
Silence hit hard.
Even the birds seemed to stop.
“He hasn’t smiled like that in two years,” my son said. “Not until this week.”
I glanced at Liam.
He was still standing there, eyes red, shoulders shaking.
My heart broke all over again.
Claire finally spoke, but her voice was smaller now. “I didn’t know…”
“You didn’t ask,” my son replied.
That landed.
Hard.
For once, she didn’t argue.
Didn’t roll her eyes.
Didn’t defend herself.
She just stood there, staring at the ground.
Then Liam moved.
Slowly.
He walked past all of us and went straight to the dumpster.
Without a word, he climbed up on the edge and started reaching inside.
That’s when something shifted.
My son rushed over. “Hey—careful, buddy.”
“I can fix them,” Liam said through tears. “I can still give them to the kids.”
His voice… it wasn’t loud.
But it carried everything.
Hope. Pain. Love.
My son froze for a second.
Then he climbed up beside him.
“Then we’ll fix them together,” he said.
I didn’t hesitate.
I joined them.
One by one, we pulled the bunnies out.
Some were dirty. Some a little torn.
But most of them… were still okay.
Still full of love.
Claire stood a few steps back.
Watching.
Not saying a word.
After a minute, she slowly walked over.
Then, without looking at anyone, she reached into the dumpster too.
At first, I thought I imagined it.
But no.
She picked one up.
Brushed it off gently.
And held it like it mattered.
“I’m… sorry,” she said quietly.
No one answered right away.
Because sometimes “sorry” doesn’t fix things.
But sometimes… it’s a start.
We spent the rest of the afternoon cleaning them.
Washing. Drying. Fixing little stitches.
Liam sat at the table later, carefully rewriting the notes.
“You’re not alone.”
“You’re strong.”
“Keep going.”
This time, Claire sat across from him.
Helping.
Not saying much.
Just… being there.
And Liam?
For the first time since everything happened…
He didn’t pull away.
Easter morning, we delivered every single bunny to the children’s ward.
Kids smiled.
Parents cried.
Nurses hugged Liam like he’d done something incredible.
Because he had.
And as we walked out of that hospital, Liam slipped his hand into mine.
Then into his dad’s.
And after a second…
Into Claire’s too.
She looked down at him, surprised.
Then she squeezed his hand gently.
Not perfect.
Not fixed overnight.
But real.
And sometimes…
That’s how healing begins.