Isabella -34-: Jpg

Isabella. Age thirty-four. Frozen in a grain of 2009 digital light.

He closed the laptop. The rain stopped. For the first time in a long time, he didn’t reach for his camera. He just sat in the quiet, letting the flash not fire.

The photo was unremarkable to anyone else. A woman standing in the doorway of a Brooklyn kitchen, half-turned, a dish towel thrown over her shoulder. A chipped mug of coffee steamed on the counter behind her. Her dark hair was pulled into a loose bun, stray curls sticking to her temple—July humidity. She wasn’t smiling, not exactly. But her eyes held that private, tired warmth of someone who had just finished a twelve-hour shift as a pediatric nurse and still had the energy to ask, “You okay?” before you could ask her. ISABELLA -34- jpg

He looked at the file name again. ISABELLA -34- jpg. He had named it that in a fit of archival organization, not realizing he was building a tombstone.

“You’re always hiding behind that thing,” she said softly. Not angry. Sad. Isabella

The file had been sitting in the folder for eleven years. Hidden. Untitled. Just a string of metadata: ISABELLA -34- jpg.

Leo reached for his coffee. It was cold. Just like that night. He closed the laptop

He lowered it. But he never deleted the frame.