The file was a tidy novella of about 45,000 words. The prose had a spare, quietly observant voice, part confessional and part field notes. It began as a domestic scene: a woman in a rented apartment cataloging objects she no longer wanted—mismatched mugs, a chipped violin bow, a stack of postcards tied with twine. Each object became a memory-prism revealing fragments of a life that had been both ordinary and oddly spectacular.