Her dreams are packed suitcases, sitting on the driveway, a piece of cloth sticking out, ready to be unfolded and opened, and then carried around. I miss her like how Americans will miss the Obama family. Touching her lips with my fingertips is like rubbing healing ointment onto an open scab. Mom says, “You will always regret it, if you don’t send her a text back.” I dump my phone into the fire, watch the plastic and metal burn, the embers and ash piling up. A black hand reaches for my shoulder, before I wake up in a cold sweat. I open up her suitcases: a blue Grand Canyon blanket, a laminated receipt from a Sushi Restaurant, a deflated basketball, her knockoff Gucci glasses, a worn piece of my heart. I touch my chest. and I feel nothing there.