The rain had started before dawn and never quite stopped.
In the industrial quarter outside of Mawlamyine, the gutters overflowed with muddy water while stray dogs prowled between tea stalls and shuttered mechanic shops. Inside a narrow concrete house with rusting window grilles, Nay Chi tied her long hair into a knot and retrieved her purse from a locked drawer.
In the back room, men were still awake from the night’s work. Cigarette smoke drifted beneath the door. She heard murmurs, the scrape of chairs, someone cursing softly.
Her husband, Ko Min, lived in shadows. She had learned long ago not to ask too many questions.
When they first married, she told herself she could still build a decent life around an indecent trade. He was kind to her in his own way. He never struck her. He bought medicine for her mother. Paid school fees for her youngest brother. In a country where survival often came dressed as compromise, she accepted what she could not change.
Still, there were nights she lay awake listening to trucks arrive at odd hours and wondered how much of a soul could be traded away piece by piece before nothing remained.
She slipped on her sandals and stepped outside with her basket.
“Wait,” one of the men called from inside. “Boss needs you.”
She hesitated.
Ko Min emerged from the back room, his face drawn from lack of sleep. “Buy extra water,” he said quietly. “We may have guests another day.”
Then, after a pause: “Don’t come into the storage room.”
She nodded automatically.
But as she crossed the courtyard, another vehicle pulled in through the gate — a mud-streaked van without plates. Two men climbed out. Between them was a figure with his hands bound and a black cloth over his head.
The hostage stumbled.
Nay Chi stopped walking.
One of the accomplices laughed. “Rich man’s family still bargaining.”
“Enough,” Ko Min muttered.
They dragged the man toward the side room.
Then the hostage spoke.
“Please… water.”
The voice was hoarse. Foreign, but familiar somehow.
One of the men yanked away the black cloth briefly to check his face for bruising.
And time folded for Nay Chi ... a supermarket aisle ... bright lights ... chrysanthemums wrapped in plastic ... Cold Storage in Singapore!
She had been twenty-three then, homesick and exhausted, working six days a week for a family near Novena. On her only Sunday off, she had received the call from Myanmar.
Her grandmother was dead.
The old woman who had raised her while her parents worked in the fields. The woman who had sold her gold earrings so Nay Chi could go to school.
She remembered sitting on a bench outside the mall afterward, unable to breathe properly.
She had wanted flowers. Just flowers. Something to place before the phone screen during the funeral prayers so her grandmother’s spirit would know she had not forgotten.
But at the cashier, her hands searched her bag and found nothing. No purse. No money.
The humiliation had burned hotter than grief.
“I’m sorry,” she had whispered to the cashier.
Then the man ahead of her who was gathering his paid grocery — perhaps in his fifties — turned quietly to the cashier.
“Add her flowers, too.”
Nay Chi protested immediately. “Sir, no, I can repay—”
He shook his head gently as he made the payment and collected the printouts.
“It’s all right. No problem at all.”
Just that.
No sermon. No flirtation. No expectation of repayment.
He left before she could even ask his name.
For years afterward, she remembered his face only in fragments: tired eyes, thinning hair, kindness without hesitation.
And now those same eyes stared at her above split lips and bruised skin. Older. Terrified. But, alive.
Nay Chi felt something sharp move through her chest — not fear, not shock, but shame. Shame that goodness could travel across years only to arrive here, in this foul courtyard, tied and bleeding at the mercy of criminals.
Ko Min noticed her expression immediately.
“What is it?”
She walked toward him slowly.
“That man,” she said, her voice trembling. “Years ago in Singapore… when my grandmother died… he helped me.”
The courtyard fell silent except for rain ticking against corrugated metal.
Ko Min frowned. “You’re certain?”
“Yes.”
One of the men scoffed. “Boss, ransom still short. We can’t just—”
Ko Min silenced him with a look.
Nay Chi rarely interfered. In all their years together, she had never asked him for anything involving his work. Never judged aloud. Never questioned.
That was why he listened now.
“He showed kindness to me,” she whispered. “When nobody needed to. Please… let him go.”
Ko Min stared at the hostage for a long moment.
Then he rubbed his face wearily, as though exhausted by the weight of all the choices that had led here.
“Put the blindfold back properly,” he said at last.
The accomplices exchanged confused glances.
“Boss?”
“You heard me.”
“But the money—”
“I said let him go.”
There was danger in mercy. Everyone in the courtyard knew it. Weakness invited betrayal. Compassion cost money. Sometimes lives.
Yet no one argued further.
The men shoved the hostage back into the van. One cursed under his breath. Another spat into the mud.
Before the doors slammed shut, Nay Chi stepped closer.
The blindfolded man could not see her, but she spoke anyway.
“You bought flowers for me once,” she said softly in English. “For my grandmother.”
There was a stunned silence from inside the van.
Then, barely audible, she said, “I remember.”
The doors closed.
The van disappeared into the rain.
For a long time, nobody moved in the courtyard.
Finally Ko Min lit a cigarette with shaking hands. “One day,” he murmured, almost to himself, “Mercy comes back looking for us.”
Nay Chi watched the empty road where the van had vanished.
Years ago, a stranger in a supermarket had spent a small sum on flowers and forgotten about it by the next morning.
But kindness, she realized, never truly disappeared.
It waited.
Quiet as rain.
Patient as memory.
And sometimes, when darkness had nearly swallowed everything, it returned to lead someone home.
Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱
Note: The above short story was generated using ChatGPT with editing.






