I am 85 years old, and Martin has been part of my life for as long as I can remember.
As children, the church choir was the center of everything. I was always there on Sundays, sitting off to the side in my wheelchair, waiting for my turn to sing. By then, I had grown used to the stares—my injury came from a fall at the wrong angle.
Then one day, Martin appeared.
He walked straight over and said, “Hey. You sing alto, too?”
That simple moment changed everything.For illustrative purposes only
We became friends instantly. He would push my chair without asking, argue with me about music, and sit beside me even when there were plenty of empty seats elsewhere. Somewhere between rehearsals and friendship, we began dating. Martin never once made me feel different. My wheelchair didn’t bother him at all.
At 20, he proposed: “I don’t want to do life without you.”
Of course, I said yes.
Martin and I built a life together.
A home that was always full. Two children, Jane and Jake, who grew up faster than I was ready for. Later, grandchildren filled the quiet spaces.
When you’ve known someone that long, they become part of how you understand the world—like breathing, like time itself. You don’t imagine life without them.
Until one day, you must.
This past winter, Martin died.
I sat beside him at the end, holding his hand, trying to think of something important to say. But when the moment came, all I managed was, “I’m right here.”
And then… he wasn’t.
The loss was unbearable. The house no longer felt like mine. At first, neighbors, friends, and family came by, but eventually, everyone returned to their own lives. I tried to do the same, for the sake of my children and grandchildren.
But Martin’s office remained untouched. His chair sat where he left it, his glasses still on the desk, even his coffee mug waiting. I told myself I’d deal with it later. And “later” kept moving further away.
Yesterday, Jane came over. She didn’t ask—she never does.
“Mom,” she said, setting her bag down. “I’m going to help you pack Dad’s things today.”
“I’m not ready.”
She gave me that look, the one she inherited from Martin.
“You don’t have to do it alone.”
That was enough.
For the first time in months, I entered Martin’s office.
I lingered near the doorway while Jane busied herself with shelves and papers. Slowly, I rolled toward the desk.
That’s when I noticed one drawer wouldn’t open. I pulled again. Nothing.
“Jane,” I asked, “did you know about this?”
“About what?”
“This drawer. It’s locked.”
She frowned. “Dad didn’t lock his drawers.”
“Exactly what I thought.”
But here it was—locked.For illustrative purposes only
Suddenly, I couldn’t stop thinking about it. Had it always been locked? Or had he done it recently? And why?
I searched Martin’s favorite jacket in the closet. Inside the pocket, I found the keys.
Back at the desk, Jane followed quietly. “You don’t have to open it right now.”
But I did. Something told me it mattered.
With trembling hands, I slid the key in. The lock clicked.
Inside was a neatly tied stack of letters. Dozens of them.
My heart pounded. Who writes letters anymore? And who had Martin been writing to?
I picked one up, turned it over, and froze.
The name written there—I hadn’t seen it in over 50 years.
Dolly.
My younger sister. The one I hadn’t spoken to in decades.
For a moment, I couldn’t breathe.
Martin and Dolly? No. That wasn’t possible. He would have told me. He told me everything. Didn’t he?
I opened the first letter. My hands shook as I unfolded it.
The first line stole the air from my lungs:
“She still talks about you in her sleep.”
I dropped the letter. Jane picked it up, her eyes widening. “Aunt Dolly?”
I nodded, forcing myself to keep reading.
“She still talks about you in her sleep. Sometimes it’s your name. Sometimes it’s just laughter I haven’t heard in years. I don’t think she knows she’s doing it. I thought you should know. —Martin.”
We went through the stack together. Some envelopes had stamps, others had been returned with forwarding labels or crossed-out addresses. Dolly had written back—not always, but enough to prove this had been going on for decades.
I found one in her handwriting. Jane leaned closer. “Mom… you don’t have to—”
I ignored her and opened it.
For illustrative purposes only
“Martin, I don’t know why I’m writing back. I told myself I wouldn’t. But you keep writing as if I’m still part of something I walked away from. Tell her I’m fine. Or don’t. Maybe it’s better if she thinks I don’t care. But I do, more than I should. I just don’t know how to fix something that’s been broken this long. —Dolly.”
I pressed the letter to my chest. All those years of silence, and she had been right there—writing back, missing me.
“I don’t understand,” Jane whispered. “Why didn’t Dad tell you?”
“I don’t know.”
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