She walked into my phone repair shop on a gray Thursday afternoon, clutching something to her chest like it might disappear if she loosened her grip.
She couldn’t have been older than sixteen.
Her hoodie sleeves were pulled down over her hands, and her eyes kept scanning the floor instead of meeting mine. I’ve owned that little shop for twelve years. I’ve seen cracked screens, water-damaged tablets, phones run over by cars.
I’ve seen adults yell over lost photos and teenagers panic over broken Snapchat streaks.
But I had never seen anyone hold a phone the way she did.
She stepped up to the counter and placed it down carefully. The screen was shattered. The casing dented.
It looked like it had been dropped more than once.
“I… I don’t have any cash,” she said quickly, like she’d rehearsed it. “But could you fix this phone? It’s my late mom’s.
It’s all I have left of her.”
There it was.
Not anger. Not entitlement. Just fear.
I picked up the phone gently.
“What’s wrong with it?”
“It won’t turn on,” she whispered. “Her voice messages are in there. Her videos.
I can’t lose them.”
Her voice cracked on the last sentence, and she swallowed hard like she was embarrassed to feel that much in front of a stranger.
I’ve lost people. I know that feeling — the panic that memories might vanish too.
I looked at the phone again. It was fixable.
Not cheap. But fixable.
“It’ll take a day,” I said. “Come back tomorrow.”
Her shoulders sagged in relief.
“I promise I’ll return.”
She meant it. I could tell.
That night, after closing, I stayed late and worked on it myself. The motherboard needed delicate soldering.
The battery connector had loosened. I replaced the screen, cleaned corrosion off the internal contacts, and carefully powered it up.
For a second, nothing.
Then — a vibration.
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