In downtown Chicago, many people recognized Evelyn Carter. Not because of her wealth, but because every afternoon she sat outside her glass-front café in a motorized wheelchair, quietly watching the street she once walked with confidence.
At 46, Evelyn had built a successful food distribution company from the ground up. Three years earlier, a serious car accident left her with partial paralysis. Doctors described it as “incomplete,” but after months of stalled progress, Evelyn accepted what she believed was the final outcome. Life, as she knew it, had narrowed.
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