I barely made it through the service that day.
Harold and I had been married for 62 years. We met when I was 18 and married within the year. Our lives had become so intertwined that standing in that church without him felt less like grief and more like trying to breathe with half a lung.
Harold and I had been married for 62 years.
My name is Rosa, and for six decades, Harold was the steadiest thing in it. Our sons stood close on either side of me, and I held their arms as we got through it.
People were filing out when I saw her. A girl, 12 or 13 at most, who didn’t belong to any face I recognized. She moved through the thinning crowd, and when her eyes landed on me, she came straight over.
“Are you Harold’s wife?” she asked.
“I am.”
She held out a plain white envelope. “Your husband… he asked me to give this to you on this day. At his funeral. He said I had to wait until this exact day.”
She held out a plain white envelope.
Before I could ask her name, or how she’d known Harold, or why a child was carrying a message for a man who’d been sick for months, she turned and ran out of the church before I could ask another question.
My son touched my arm. “Mom? You okay?”
“Fine… I’m fine.”
I slipped the envelope into my purse and said nothing more about it.
I opened it at the kitchen table that evening, after everyone had gone home and the house had settled into the particular silence that follows a funeral.
A child was carrying a message for a man who’d been sick for months.
Inside was a letter in Harold’s handwriting, and a small brass key that clinked against the table when I tipped the envelope over.
I unfolded the letter. “My love,” it began. “I should’ve told you this years ago, but I couldn’t. Sixty-five years ago, I thought I’d buried this secret forever, but it followed me my whole life. You deserve the truth. This key opens Garage 122 at the address below. Go when you’re ready. Everything is there.”
I read it twice.
I wasn’t ready. Still, I put on my coat, called a taxi, and went there.
“Sixty-five years ago, I thought I’d buried this secret forever.”
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