Not by being undone. But by being remembered.
Three years of mundane tragedies. A job she didn't love. A relationship that faded like old newsprint. A mother whose voice grew thinner and thinner over the phone until one day it stopped altogether.
So when the old woman at the edge of the village offered her a small glass jar containing a single, shimmering blue butterfly, Lena almost laughed.
She left the lid on.
Lena understood now. The old woman hadn't sold her magic. She had sold her a choice. One butterfly for one life—the one she had lived. But there were always more jars, more wings, more chances to unscrew the lid and watch the past reconfigure itself into something softer.
Lena paid her a few coins, more out of curiosity than belief, and carried the jar home. The butterfly inside was exquisite—its wings dusted with scales that caught the light like stained glass, its antennae tracing delicate question marks against the glass. She set it on her windowsill and forgot about it for three years.
Outside, the sun broke through the clouds for the first time in weeks. And somewhere, in a Bangkok she had never actually visited, a woman named Fah was saving a patient's life with steady, capable hands—unaware that she owed her existence to a butterfly in a jar, and a woman who had finally learned that the smallest things change everything.
She unscrewed the lid.
The morning after the funeral, Lena found the jar again, buried under tax documents and unpaid bills. The butterfly was still alive. It should have been impossible—three years without food, without air exchange—but there it was, beating its wings slowly, patiently, as if it had been waiting for this exact moment.
She lifted the jar to the light. The gold butterfly paused, as if waiting for her decision.
On the fourth day, she found the jar on her windowsill again. Inside, a new butterfly—this one gold, its wings marked with patterns like distant continents. No note. No explanation. Just the same patient beating, the same impossible existence.
Some changes, she realized, weren't about undoing the past. They were about carrying it differently. The butterfly had shown her every life she could have lived. But it had also shown her that the life she did live—with all its dropped coins and missed calls and mangoes never bought—was the only one that had led her to this window, this morning, this choice.