“I noticed. Thank you.”
She picked an apple from the fruit bowl and started to leave, then paused. “Diana?”
“Yes?”
“If I’d like pancakes again someday… I’ll ask nicely.”
A small smile tugged my mouth. “That’s all I ever wanted.” She nodded and headed out the door, shoulders lighter than before.
Two months have passed since the Legendary Lunchbox Lesson. Kayla still loves fancy shoes and online shopping, but she also wipes counters, takes her plates to the sink, and says please and thank you. We will probably never braid each other’s hair or share deep secrets, yet respect and calm have bloomed where tension once lived.
Last weekend we planted marigolds in the front garden. She grumbled about dirt under her nails but kept working. On Sunday we made pancakes together—side by side, flipping golden circles onto plates. She ate four, laughed at her syrup moustache, and said, “They’re better than I remembered.”
Tom asked how I managed to change his daughter from a whirlwind into a reasonable adult. I only shrugged. “Sometimes people must stare at their own mess before they can pick up a broom.”
Kindness opens the first door, but clear boundaries close the door behind you to keep the peace. And sometimes the quiet people you overlook turn out to be the strongest voices in the room once they decide to speak.

