PART 2: Do you know what you did? phunhoang

The luxury showroom glowed with warm designer light, endless shelves of crystal dishes and porcelain sets sparkling over polished marble—then disaster exploded in the first second. A tiny boy in a torn school uniform brushed past a display, his ripped sleeve catching the edge. An entire row of crystal dishes tipped forward. SMASH. Plates shattered across the floor in a deafening cascade. Every shopper froze. The boy stumbled backward in terror, dirty face already crumpling into tears. Silence slammed over the store. Then the manager stormed forward in heels, fury sharp in every step. “Do you know what you did?!” she snapped. The boy shook violently.

“I’m sorry… please… I didn’t mean…” A rich woman nearby scoffed loudly. “He can’t pay for one plate.” Phones began to rise. The boy clutched his tiny backpack to his chest, sobbing. “My mom said… bring medicine…” He opened the bag with trembling hands. Inside—coins, carefully counted… and a folded prescription paper. The room went quiet in a different way now. The manager snatched the paper angrily—then stopped cold. Her eyes widened reading the name. Slowly, she looked back at the boy. “Your mother is… Anna?”

The child nodded, crying harder. Before anyone could speak, an old man across the aisle dropped his cane with a loud crack against the marble and stepped forward in shock. “Anna’s son?!” he gasped. The camera crash-pushed into his trembling face. But it didn’t end there. The manager’s anger had vanished completely. “That can’t be possible,” she whispered. The old man ignored her, kneeling painfully in front of the boy. “Where is your mother?” he asked. The boy wiped tears with a dirty sleeve. “In the car.” The rich woman laughed nervously. “This is ridiculous.” No one joined her. The old man’s hands shook as he reached into his wallet and pulled out an old photo. He turned it toward the crowd. Young Anna… standing beside him in front of this very store. “She’s my daughter,” he said, voice breaking. The manager staggered backward. “We were told she died years ago.” The boy frowned. “She said you told everyone that.” The old man froze. “Why would she say that?” The boy looked straight at the manager and held out the prescription. “Because she got sick after you pushed her down the stairs.”

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