PART 2: The Box That Waited Ten Years
When Nora died, silence moved into our house.
It settled in every room.
Her slippers remained untouched in the hallway.
Her toothbrush stayed beside ours.
Her empty bed became the first thing I saw every morning and the last thing I saw every night.
Birthdays became especially painful.
There were still cakes.
Still candles.
Still decorations.
But there was always one chair missing.
Every year, Leila and I silently counted three places even though only two of us remained.
As the years passed, grief changed us.
Leila became distant and sharp.
I became quiet.
Pain didn’t bring us closer.
It pushed us apart.
By the time we turned twenty-one, we barely knew how to talk to each other anymore.
That morning, Mom invited us home for breakfast.
The dining room was decorated with balloons and streamers.
A small birthday cake sat nearby.
And there, at the table, were three place settings.
Neither Leila nor I commented on it.
Then Mom entered carrying a small wooden box.
Immediately, something inside me tightened.
She placed it carefully between us.
Resting on top was an old envelope.
The handwriting stopped my heart.
I knew it instantly.
Nora’s.
Across the front were four words:
**OPEN ON OUR 21ST BIRTHDAY.**
Leila dropped her fork.
Mom’s eyes filled with tears.
“She made this before she passed away,” Mom whispered. “She asked me to keep it safe until today.”
For years, Mom had never opened it.
Not once.
Neither of us spoke.
Finally, with trembling hands, I lifted the lid.
Inside were three bundles tied with faded purple ribbon.
One had my name.
One had Leila’s.
The third was addressed to both of us.
I opened mine first.
Inside was a friendship bracelet, a childhood photograph, and a handwritten letter.
As I unfolded the paper, it felt as though Nora had stepped back into the room.
“Dear Gia,
If you’re reading this, you’re twenty-one now. That sounds very old, but Mom says twenty-one is still young, so don’t act like you know everything.”
A laugh escaped through my tears.
The letter continued.
She remembered everything.
My habit of drawing flowers everywhere.
The songs I sang when I thought nobody could hear.
The way I hid my feelings whenever I was hurt.
“People who love you should know where it hurts,” she wrote.
I pressed the letter against my chest.
Even after ten years, Nora still understood me better than anyone.
Then Leila opened hers.
Inside were tiny treasures from childhood and another letter.
As she read, tears spilled down her face.
“You are not mean,” Nora had written.
“You are scared. There’s a difference.”
Leila broke down completely.
For years, I had mistaken her anger for resentment.
I thought she blamed me.
Instead, she had been grieving alone.
Finally, she looked at me.
“I missed her so much.”
“I know.”
Her voice cracked.
“I missed you too.”
Those four words shattered the wall between us.
I walked around the table and hugged her.
For the first time in years, neither of us pulled away.