A little girl only asked the Pope for one blessing, but the whole room went quiet when he heard who she had just buried.-luna

When Lily stepped back from the Pope’s arms, the handmade card was still in her hands.

But something about the way she held it had changed.

Before, she had gripped it like a job she had failed to finish.

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Now she held it flat against her chest, careful and close, like someone had finally told her it had reached the right place.

Her grandmother, Carol, did not move right away.

She stood a few feet behind Lily with a tissue crushed in her fist, one hand still covering her mouth.

For a week, Carol had been trying not to cry in front of the child.

She had cried in the shower.

She had cried in the laundry room, holding one of Hannah’s old sweatshirts.

She had cried in the front seat of her car outside the funeral home, with the engine running and the radio off.

But not in front of Lily.

Lily had already lost her mother.

Carol had decided the child did not need to lose the adults too.

That morning, though, standing in a public line with strangers all around them, Carol felt her strength slip.

The Pope had bent close to Lily and whispered only a few words.

No microphone caught them.

No one in the church group could hear them clearly.

But Carol saw Lily’s shoulders drop.

That tiny movement was what undid her.

It was the first time all week Lily looked less like she was holding her breath.

Carol later tried to remember everything about that moment.

The sound of shoes on the polished floor.

The quiet pause in the line.

The interpreter leaning back, eyes wet.

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