“He was alive for eight minutes,” Thomas continued quietly. “Long enough to talk. Long enough to make me promise you’d know the truth.”
I sat down hard.
“He was trapped under debris,” Thomas said. “I was pinned too. Radio was dead. Evac was delayed.”
My chest felt like it was collapsing.
“He told me about you. About how you stayed up sewing patches on his uniforms. About the dumplings you used to pack him for school.”
I pressed my hand to my mouth.
“He asked me to do one thing,” Thomas whispered. “If I lived… I had to come find you. And tell you he wasn’t afraid. And that his last words weren’t pain.”
Tears slid down my face unchecked.
“What were they?” I asked.
Thomas closed his eyes.
