His voice broke before he finished the first sentence. Rage, yes—but it was the kind that hides inside grief, the kind that blames the living because the dead can’t answer back. One letter had detonated everything he thought he knew about his mother, about himself, about the distance he’d called “normal” for years. Now he wanted answers, demanded them, begged for them, all in the same breath. But the one person who could explain was gone, and the stranger holding her last words was me. Between us lay a silence thick with things unsaid, a love misdelivered, and a question that could never be fully unask…
He didn’t really want to know what she’d told me; he wanted to know why she’d never said it to him. His fury circled that wound like a guard dog, barking at every imagined theft. But grief has a way of stripping anger down to its bones, and when it did, what remained was a son terrified he’d been loved incorrectly, or not enough, or too late to matter.
I told him the truth as gently as I could: his mother hadn’t chosen me over him; she’d chosen the only path her fear allowed. The letter was not a secret inheritance, but a rehearsal for the words she never found the courage to speak aloud. Love fails in its timing more often than in its feeling. If there is any mercy in that, it’s this: while we’re still breathing, we can decide to speak before the ink dries, to reach before the door quietly closes.