Shari Wagner was grieving the death of her young grandson in April when the sunlight streaming over her shoulder struck a wood and glass display case across her living room.
Caught in the rays, she noticed, were small smudges and a handprint — tracks that 1 ½-year-old Abraham Flynn had left behind before he was struck and killed by a van on April 16.
" 'Oh my gosh, I have a part of him here,' " Wagner said she thought at the time. "Every morning I'd wake up and check on it."
As the days passed, Wagner had a growing fear that the handprint would disappear — that is, until St. Paul police officer Mark Lundquist arrived at her Mendota Heights home Monday morning to preserve the print.
Working on an hour's sleep after completing a 12-hour overnight shift investigating St. Paul's most recent homicide, Lundquist crawled under the cabinet door and removed the pane of glass in question.
After a painstaking effort using different techniques and his expertise in forensics, he was able to preserve the images, allowing Shari Wagner and her husband, Eric, to keep a part of Abraham with them forever.
Shari Wagner said she planned to have an artist turn one handprint into jewelry. The Police Department also planned to turn at least one print into a poster-sized piece of artwork for the family.
The Wagners described Abraham as "always smiling" and a "joyful light to our family." He loved throwing toys for his grandparents' dog to fetch in the living room, and they believe he likely left the handprints behind on a special night that he spent alone with them.