At 78, I gave up everything I had—my apartment, my old pickup truck, even my cherished collection of vinyl records.
Elizabeth’s letter arrived without warning, tucked between bills and flyers, as if it didn’t realize how much power it held.
“I’ve been thinking of you.”
That’s all it said. I read it three times before I allowed myself to breathe.
A letter. From Elizabeth.
“I wonder if you ever think about those days. About how we laughed, about the way you held my hand that night by the lake. I do. I always have.”
We started writing letters back and forth.
And then one day, she sent her address. That was it. That was all I needed to know.
I sold everything. Booked a one-way flight.
As the plane lifted into the sky, I closed my eyes and imagined her waiting for me.
But a strange pressure in my chest made me breathe harder.
“Sir, are you okay?”
I tried to respond, but no words came.
When I woke up, everything had changed. I was in a hospital.
A woman sat beside my bed, holding my hand.
“You scared us. I’m Lauren, your nurse,” she said gently.
“Where am I?” I croaked.
“Bozeman General Hospital. Your plane had to make an emergency landing. You had a mild heart attack. You’re stable now, but the doctors say you can’t fly for a while.”
I let my head fall back on the pillow. My dream would have to wait.
“I don’t strike myself as someone who just sits around waiting to die, either.”
She didn’t flinch or scold me. She just looked at me with quiet understanding.
“You were going to see someone, weren’t you?”
“Elizabeth. After forty years of silence, she asked me to come.”
“Forty years is a long time.”
“Too long.”
She didn’t ask more questions. Just sat beside me, her hands folded in her lap.
“You remind me of someone,” I said after a pause.
“Yeah? Who?”
“Myself. A long time ago.”
There was something in her eyes—a flicker of emotion she didn’t speak aloud.
On my last morning at the hospital, she walked into my room holding a set of car keys.
“What’s this?” I asked, frowning.
“A way out.”
I searched her face for any hesitation, but found none.
“You don’t even know me.”
“I know enough. And I want to help.”
We drove for hours. When we reached the address from Elizabeth’s letter, it wasn’t a house. It was a nursing home.
Lauren turned off the engine.
“This is it?”
“It’s the address she gave me.”
Then I saw her—not Elizabeth, but her sister.
“Susan,” I breathed.
She gave me a soft, sad smile.
“James. You came.”
“You let me believe Elizabeth was waiting. You let me think—” My voice cracked. “Why?”
“I found your letters,” she whispered.
“Elizabeth never stopped reading them. Even after all those years.”
“She passed away last year. I lost the house too.”
At Elizabeth’s grave, I whispered,
“I made it. I’m here.”
But I was too late.
Maybe it was time to stop chasing what was gone.
Lauren stayed. She took a job at the local nursing home. I managed to buy back Elizabeth’s house.
One evening, I invited Susan to stay.
She hesitated.
“James, I… I don’t want to be a burden.”
“You’re not,” I said softly.
“You just wanted a home. So did I.”
Eventually, Lauren moved in too.
Now, every evening, we sit in the garden, playing chess, watching the sky change colors.