By seven o’clock, the guests had gone home. The girls were exhausted, draped over the couch in a heap of wrapping paper and new stuffed
I opened the door, expecting to see a stray cat or maybe a package from Amazon that had been delivered to the wrong house. Instead, I found a box. It was medium-sized, wrapped in plain brown paper but tied with a pale pink ribbon. No
I picked it up. It wasn’t heavy, and it didn’t rattle when I moved it. Something about it felt strange, but the neighborhood was quiet and I figured one of the party guests must have left it. Then I saw the tag.
A small white card tied to the ribbon with a piece of twine. Handwritten. I turned it over and read the words: ‘To my beautiful daughters. Love, Mom.’
My knees nearly gave out. I gripped the doorframe and stared at that handwriting, the same
For a long moment, I couldn’t move. I couldn’t breathe. My mind raced through impossible explanations. Maybe someone was playing a cruel joke. Maybe I was hallucinating. Maybe, somehow, Anne had written this years ago and someone had found it and delivered it now. But who? And why today?
I looked up and down the street. Empty. No car driving away, no figure disappearing around the corner.
I brought it inside and set it on the kitchen table. Karen saw my face and immediately put down the dish towel. ‘Dave, what’s wrong?’ She came over and looked at the box, then at the tag. I watched her face go pale. ‘That’s Anne’s handwriting,’ she whispered.
I nodded. I couldn’t speak. The girls were still in the living room, their laughter drifting in along with the sound of some cartoon on the TV. They didn’t know what I was holding.
I haven’t opened it. It’s been twenty-four hours now, and that box is still sitting on my kitchen table, the pink ribbon untouched. I’ve spent the whole day staring at it, my mind running in circles. What could possibly be inside? A letter? A gift she bought before she died? Something else entirely? And who left it there, on the exact day of their tenth birthday, without a single word?
Part of me is terrified to find out. Part of me is terrified not to. My daughters keep asking what the box is for, and I’ve told them it’s a surprise I’ll open later. But I know I can’t keep it from them forever. They deserve to know what their mother left for them — if it really is from her.
I’ve called everyone I can think of: Linda, the hospital, even the postal service. Nobody knows anything. The box feels like it dropped straight out of the past, carrying a message I’m not sure I’m ready to receive.
Ten years ago, I lost my wife and gained three daughters in a single breath. I thought I’d made peace with the life I had to build without her. But now this box sits here, holding a piece of her I never expected to find, and I don’t know whether it will heal the last broken part of my heart or shatter it all over again.
I keep thinking about what Anne would want. She was always so thoughtful, so careful to make everyone feel loved. If she left something behind, she meant for us to find it. But the mystery of it — the way it appeared without warning, without explanation — makes me feel like I’m standing at the edge of something I can’t see.
Tonight, after the girls are in bed, I’m going to open it. I have to. I owe it to Anne, and I owe it to Olivia, Emma, and Ava. Whatever’s inside, it’s the last message from the woman who held us all together, even after she was gone. And maybe, just maybe, it will finally give us the answer we’ve been searching for all these years.