Ana shares half her prized sandwich with an older woman outside a shop, then rushes inside to buy her groceries. The woman disappears, but her comment—“You look exactly like my granddaughter”—sticks with Ana and sends her digging out an old shoebox of adoption mementos, including half of a torn photo of a woman holding a baby.
The next day, the woman, Tamara, knocks on Ana’s door with the other half of that same photo. She reveals Ana had a twin, Alina, who died two years earlier. Their young birth mother, Daria, had placed one baby for adoption, and Alina had long hoped to find her sister. The matched photo pieces confirm the truth, and Tamara asks to come in and talk.
Over tea, Tamara shares stories of Alina—her yellow kitchen wall, volunteering, “suspended sandwiches,” and a list of small kindnesses she was completing when she died. Ana tells her adoptive mom, Kate, who welcomes Tamara with open arms; together they piece the family history and grief that time had scattered.
In the days that follow, Ana visits Alina’s bakery, leaves suspended sandwiches in her honor, and lets Tamara fold into her life. Grief and belonging mingle: Ana mourns the sister she never knew yet feels a missing piece click into place. Hand in hand with her boyfriend, she realizes she isn’t wandering anymore—she’s finally arriving.