My Little Girl Used the Birthday Money She Had Saved for a Dollhouse to Pay for a Stranger’s Prescription – The Phone Call I Got That Night Made My Hands Shake

83

Real sobs she couldn’t control.

Initially, I thought she was overwhelmed by Lily’s kindness.

Then I realized that she was staring directly at my daughter’s face.

More specifically, the small crescent-shaped birthmark near Lily’s cheekbone.

The woman covered her mouth and cried even harder.

Strangers pretended not to watch.

I pretended I wasn’t crying. Lily looked confused.

“Did I do something wrong?” my daughter whispered.

“No,” the woman managed through tears. “No, sweetheart.

Y…you did something beautiful!”

The pharmacist quietly processed the prescription while the woman tried to compose herself.

Before the woman left, she turned to me, still trembling slightly.

“Hi, c…could I…I maybe have your phone number?” she asked softly.

Normally, I wouldn’t have given it out so easily, but something about her made me give it to her without thinking.

Then Lily and I got what we came for and left.

By that evening, I’d almost stopped thinking about the pharmacy incident because I didn’t expect to hear from that woman again.

Lily was upstairs building blanket forts while I folded laundry on the couch.

At exactly 9:47 p.m., my phone rang. It was an unknown number.

“Hello?”

A shaky breath crackled through the speaker.

“M…my name i…is Marisol…” Her voice sounded weaker now. “I’m th…the woman your daughter helped today.”

I straightened immediately.

“Yes, I’m Helen,” I whispered and gave my last name, too.

There was another pause.

Marisol took a shaky breath and continued.

“I…I don’t have much time.

I’m term…terminally ill. But before I die… I…I need to leave something for your daughter. Something im…important.”

My fingers tightened around the phone.

“Tom…tomorrow morning,” she continued weakly, “there’ll be a package on your porch.

Please… open it alone first.”

A chill ran through me.

“Marisol, what’s this about?”

Instead of answering, she asked quietly, “Pl…please confirm your address?”

I hesitated only a second before giving it to her.

“Thank you,” she whispered. Then the line went silent before I could respond.

I barely slept that night. I told myself it would be a thank-you note or maybe a small gift.

At 6 a.m.

the following morning, I opened the front door and saw a red package sitting neatly on the porch.

No return address.

Just my name written carefully across the top.

Lily was still asleep upstairs.

I carried the package into the kitchen and opened it slowly.

But the moment I saw what was inside, I dropped it!

Because it wasn’t money, toys, or anything I could’ve prepared myself for.

It was an old photo.

My hands started trembling before my brain had even fully processed what I was looking at.

The photo wasn’t recent. The edges were curled and yellowed with age.

And it made me go pale because I had no idea who Marisol really was.

In the picture was a little girl with Lily’s exact birthmark!

The same cheek, shape, and placement!

My stomach dropped so hard I thought I might faint!

The child couldn’t have been older than six. She sat upright in a hospital bed beside a younger version of Marisol.

My eyes drifted to the back of the photo.

Four words were written there in faded blue ink.

“Her name was Elena.”

I sat down hard on the kitchen floor.

What you need to understand is that Lily’s birthmark isn’t common.

Even the nurses commented on it when she was born.

And now there was another little girl with the same mark.

Upstairs, I heard Lily’s bedroom door creak open.

I quickly slid the photo back into the box before she came downstairs.