Hoàng Dung took a pen. On the margin of page 25, she wrote: “I choose the mountain. I choose the laugh. I choose to stay.”

Her hands trembled as she reached the final page. was empty. No silverfish, no glue residue—just blank, creamy paper. But written underneath in her own handwriting—except she’d never written it—were four words:

She turned pages slowly. Age 10, crying at a piano recital. Age 15, secretly kissing someone whose face was scratched out with black ink. Age 18, holding a university acceptance letter, her father’s thumb covering the corner of the frame. Her father, who left when she was 20 and never said goodbye.

Hoàng Dung turned 25 on a gray, rainy Sunday. The gift came unwrapped—a thick, leather-bound album with no name on the cover. “Found it in the attic,” said her mother, avoiding her eyes. “It’s yours now.”