He was silent, hollow-eyed, and broken—then, in 1891, in a dim London studio, Edward Harrow did what no father should have to do: he stood before a lens holding the small, fragile body of his infant daughter, Clara, already gone from the world. The room smelled of lavender and mourning, the winter light slicing through tall windows like a pale blade. His hands trembled around her tiny frame, her cheeks still soft and pink, her fingers curled around nothing, and the bells of St. Martin’s tolled slowly outside, as if the city itself had paused in grief. It wasn’t just a photograph—it was a quiet, unbearable ceremony of love and memory. Edward had not wept at the doctor’s verdict, nor when the nurse had covered her form, yet now he felt her absence in every shiver of his fingers, every weight of her bundle against his chest. The photographer’s whispered directions hovered between them like a soft plea: “Hold still, sir.” He kissed her hair one last time, the faint scent of milk and lilac...