A few months later, I flew out to see her. We spent the day setting up her dorm, arguing about towels and storage bins.
The next morning, she had class.
“Go explore,” she said, kissing my cheek. “There’s a café around the corner. Great coffee, terrible music.”
So I went.
The café was warm and crowded, filled with the smell of coffee and sugar. There were mismatched chairs and a chalkboard menu.
I stood in line, staring at the menu without really reading it.
Then I heard a woman’s voice at the counter.
She was ordering a latte.
Her voice was calm, slightly raspy.
And something about the rhythm of it struck me.
It sounded like… me.
I looked up.
A woman stood at the counter—gray hair twisted into a bun. Same height. Same posture.
I thought, That’s strange.
Then she turned.
Our eyes met.
For a moment, I didn’t feel like an elderly woman in a café.
I felt like I had stepped outside myself—and was looking back.
I was staring at my own face.
A little older. A little softer.
But unmistakably mine.