Zora 7 Mirella Teen 13 Apr 2026
Zora pointed to the rug, the bed, even the closet. They searched for ten minutes. Nothing.
“For you,” Zora said. “So you always remember you’re my hero.”
Zora’s lip began to tremble. “It’s gone forever,” she whispered.
Mirella smiled and handed her the button. “No, you found it. I just helped you remember.” zora 7 mirella teen 13
They went to the kitchen. And there, stuck to the bottom of the syrup bottle, was the tiny rainbow button.
Mirella felt a warmth spread through her chest—bigger than any phone buzz or test score. She pinned the button to her backpack. And from that day on, whenever she felt too old or too busy, she looked at the little rainbow circle and remembered: helping someone smaller than you isn’t a chore. It’s a superpower.
Zora thought. “In the kitchen… helping Mom make pancakes.” Zora pointed to the rug, the bed, even the closet
Would you like a version where Zora and Mirella are friends instead of sisters, or one focused on a different challenge (like bullying, school stress, or sharing)?
Mirella knelt down to Zora’s eye level. “Wait. When you lose something small, don’t just look with your eyes. Think with your heart. Where were you happiest today?”
“Mirella!” Zora called. “I lost the special button. The rainbow one from Grandma.” “For you,” Zora said
Mirella looked up from her math worksheet. She was tired and a little stressed. A week ago, she would have sighed and said, “Not now, Zora.” But she remembered something their mom had said that morning: “Mirella, you’re Zora’s hero. Even on hard days, a little patience goes a long way.”
Zora was seven years old and very small for her age, but she had a huge imagination. Her older sister, Mirella, was thirteen—practically a grown-up, in Zora’s eyes. Mirella had homework, secrets, and a phone that buzzed with messages from friends Zora didn’t know.
Zora’s face lit up. “You found it! You’re a detective, Mirella!”
So instead of ignoring her, Mirella put down her pencil. “Okay, show me where you last had it.”


