The board meeting that followed was tense, filled with coded language and careful accusations, until Michael spoke plainly. “You believe my blindness makes me weak,” he said. “But you confuse sight with understanding. We are thriving. Our people stay. Our partners trust us. The only thing that has changed is that I no longer lead from fear.”

The motion to reduce his authority failed.

That night, Lily sat beside him, drawing shapes on his sleeve with her finger. “Did you fix your work problem?” she asked.

“I think I did,” he answered.

“Good,” she said. “You should keep the good parts.”

“What are the good parts?” he asked.

She considered seriously before answering. “People who do not eat alone. Fries. And talking.”

Michael closed his eyes, smiling into the darkness, understanding at last that vision was not the same as seeing.

He never regained his sight, but each evening, when a small chair scraped beside his own and a child insisted on sharing space, he knew he had not been abandoned by the world. He had simply been waiting to be found.