"Try the at the other end of the mall," the clerk suggested.

She didn't wait for the elevator. She took the stairs two at a time. The hunt was almost over, and for once, the mall's hum sounded like a victory lap.

Ten minutes later, Sarah stood in the doorway of the dedicated Vera Bradley store. It was a soft-lit sanctuary of patterns. The walls were lined with everything from to rolling luggage . The sales associate, a woman named Linda who wore a quilted lanyard, shook her head sympathetically.

"Honey, that print is out of stock here," Linda said. "But check our . Sometimes the 'Online Exclusive' or 'Outlet' sections have the vault pieces."

She knew the target: a tote in a retired paisley print that her mother had mentioned once, three years ago, during a particularly long car ride.

Sarah ducked into , weaving past the perfume clouds. "Do you have the Vera Bradley section?" she asked a distracted clerk. A vague wave toward the back of the store led her to a wall of quilted cotton. It was a kaleidoscope of colors, but the specific pattern—a mix of deep plums and vintage greens—was nowhere to be found.

The overhead fluorescent lights of the suburban mall hummed a low, clinical tune that set Sarah’s teeth on edge. She was on a mission. It was 4:00 PM on a Tuesday, and her mother’s birthday brunch was less than twenty hours away.