I keep the photo of you, not for your smile, but for the memories behind it. The way your collar curled like a question never asked, the light grazing your cheek as if it knew this was the last time you’d be that exact version of you.
You are forever mid-laugh, forever leaning just so, forever unaware that I would return to this frame like a pilgrim to a relic, touching the edges as if they could answer what time refused to explain.
The world has spun since that shutter blinked, but you– you remain untouched by the turning. No grief has reached you there. No apology. No change.
I keep the photo of you because it doesn’t ask for anything. It doesn’t age. It doesn’t forget. It simply holds what I cannot: the stillness of you, before the leaving, before the blur.
And in between heartbeats, I visit you, not to remember, but to stay.