The Birthday Flower Annie Bought Herself Exposed a Family Secret-tantan

The first time Annie walked into Sarah’s flower shop, she was seven years old and barely tall enough to see over the counter.

The bell over the door gave a thin, tired jingle, and March rain followed her inside in cold little drops on the shoulders of her purple hoodie.

Sarah looked up from trimming stems and saw a small girl with damp bangs, worn sneakers, and three crumpled dollar bills pressed flat in her fist.

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The shop smelled like wet leaves, fresh lilies, and the coffee Sarah had poured two hours earlier but never finished.

Outside, traffic moved slowly along the block, tires hissing through puddles while a family SUV idled near the curb and then pulled away.

Sarah waited for someone to come in after the girl.

No one did.

The girl stood quietly by the front bucket, staring at the cheapest flowers like she was trying to solve a math problem.

“How much is that one?” she asked.

Her voice was polite in a way that made Sarah’s chest tighten.

Sarah followed her gaze to a yellow daisy with one bruised petal and a slightly bent stem.

“For you?” Sarah said. “Three dollars.”

The child nodded and placed the money on the glass counter carefully, smoothing each bill with her palm.

Then she asked the question Sarah would remember for years.

“Can you wrap it like a birthday gift?”

Sarah smiled because children often asked for things that sounded sweet at first.

“Of course,” she said.

She pulled pale tissue from beneath the counter, added a small ribbon, and folded the paper around the daisy as gently as if it were something expensive.

The girl watched every movement.

Not excited.

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