So she did the only thing that made sense in her world.
She gave him her toy wings.
They weren’t anything special to an adult. Just a small pair of plastic wings from a costume box, slightly bent at the edges, with faded glitter still clinging to the surface. The kind of thing that usually gets forgotten under beds or tossed aside after playtime ends.
But to her, in that moment, they meant everything.
She didn’t ask questions. She didn’t try to understand why he couldn’t stand, or why his voice sounded different than before. She only saw that he needed help, and in her mind, help had a shape. A solution had weight. And love had to be given, not explained.
So she carefully placed the wings beside him, as if they were something powerful enough to change the situation. Her hands were steady, completely certain in a way only a child can be.
“Now you can fly too,” she said softly.
He didn’t respond at first. He just looked at her, then at the wings, then back at her again. And something in his expression shifted—not because the wings were real, but because the intention behind them was unmistakable.
In a world that often demands logic, she offered belief instead.
And somehow, that was enough to make the moment feel lighter than it should have been.