The Graduation Note I Carried For Fourteen Years Without Opening

The Graduation Note I Carried For Fourteen Years Without Opening

Trying To Be Brave

Bella and I tried so hard to be brave about it. We sat in my beat-up Honda Civic outside her house.

The same car where we’d had our first kiss. Where we’d spent countless hours just talking about everything and nothing.

We talked about long-distance relationships like they were actually viable. Like two eighteen-year-olds with no money and an entire ocean between them could make it work through sheer willpower.

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We both knew better. We just weren’t ready to say it out loud yet.

The weeks between graduation and my departure felt simultaneously endless and far too short. Every moment we spent together carried this unbearable weight.

This acute awareness that we were counting down to something irreversible and final.

Prom happened right in the middle of all of it. It felt less like a celebration than an elaborate funeral for the future we’d imagined.

We danced to every slow song. We took pictures with our friends, all of us dressed up and pretending everything was normal.

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We laughed at jokes that weren’t actually funny. Every moment felt precious and painful in equal measure.

I held Bella closer than necessary during the last dance. My face buried in her hair, breathing in the familiar scent of her coconut shampoo.

Trying desperately to memorize exactly how this moment felt. The weight of her head on my shoulder, the way her hand fit perfectly in mine.

We both knew that prom night was probably the last time we’d see each other for a very long time. Maybe forever.

Ezoic

The Note I Couldn’t Face

At the end of the night, we stood in the high school parking lot. Glitter from the decorations littered the asphalt.

Deflated balloons tumbled across the pavement in the warm June breeze.

Bella reached into her small beaded clutch purse. She pulled out a folded piece of notebook paper.

Her hands were shaking so badly she almost dropped it.

“Read this when you get home tonight,” she said. Her voice trembling so severely I could barely understand the words.

“Promise me you’ll read it, Chris. Promise.”

My own voice wasn’t much steadier when I answered. “I promise. I will.”

I slipped that note into the inside pocket of my rented navy blue jacket. Like it was something incredibly fragile and precious.

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Like it might shatter into a thousand pieces if I handled it wrong. Like opening it too soon would break something that couldn’t be fixed.

But I didn’t read it that night.

I couldn’t.

The truth is, it hurt too much to even think about reading it. Every time I touched that jacket, felt the slight crinkle of paper in the pocket, my chest would tighten.

My eyes would burn with tears I refused to let fall.

I told myself I’d read it later. When it wouldn’t feel like voluntarily ripping my own heart out.

Later turned into tomorrow. Tomorrow turned into next week.

Next week turned into next month. Next month turned into next year.

And somehow, impossibly, next year turned into fourteen years.

Building A Life In Germany

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