
Forty years ago, my husband Michael kissed me goodbye on an ordinary morning. “Do we need anything from the store?” he asked. “Just milk,” I smiled. He never came back.
At first, I wasn’t worried. Maybe he ran into a friend. Maybe he picked up extra groceries. But hours passed. Then days. Then weeks. I called everyone — neighbors, friends, his workplace — no one had seen him. The police had no leads. People whispered that he’d abandoned us, but I refused to believe it. I knew my husband. Something was wrong.
I raised our children alone. The years crawled by. Hope became a quiet ache I carried in my chest. Then, one crisp autumn morning — forty years later — I found a plain envelope in my mailbox. No return…
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