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He took down the small, discrete trans flag from behind the register and hung it proudly in the front window, next to the rainbow one.

Leo’s instinct was to deflect, to shut down. But Mara’s words echoed: We need our people to show up.

“Leo, you have to come,” urged Sam, his non-binary shop assistant, waving a flyer for a ‘Trans Visibility Town Hall’ at The Haven. “They’re finally addressing the housing crisis for trans youth. Your voice matters.”

“Tonight, we’re talking about a shelter. A place for trans kids. The gay bars will donate profits. The lesbian book club is knitting blankets. The drag queens are fundraising. But we need our people to show up. Not just as allies, but as family.”

Ash’s eyes glistened. “You’d do that?”

After the talk, Leo stood by the punch bowl, feeling like a fraud in his own skin. One of the teenagers, a kid named Ash with choppy hair and a hospital bracelet still on their wrist, approached him.

For the first time in a decade, Leo was visible. Not as a victim, or a talking point, or a controversy. But as a man, a bookseller, and a part of a family that had, despite everything, learned to love him whole.

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