She was turning thirteen, and I couldn’t be there. Again. So I sent a box—one more gift she might never see.
I tried my best to do enough, until the day a letter showed up on my porch. Inside, in shaky handwriting: “Why did you forget me, Mom?”
I wrapped the dress carefully, folding soft tissue around each layer of fabric like it was gold. My fingers moved slowly, almost like I was scared the dress would disappear if I touched it wrong.
It was pale blue, the kind of blue that reminded me of the sky right before sunset — soft, hopeful. The skirt flowed like water, and the satin waist caught the light just enough to shine. It was the kind of dress a girl should feel proud to twirl in.
Grown-up, but still sweet. The shoes sparkled just enough. Not too flashy.
Just right for dancing. I held the note between my fingers for a moment before writing. My hand shook.
My heart did, too. Happy 13th birthday, sweetheart. I’m sorry we can’t be together.
I know it’s been so long. Please believe — there is nothing I want more than to hug you. I hope the court allows changes soon.
I’ll never stop trying. I hear you love to dance. I hope you feel beautiful in this dress.
I read it twice, then kissed the envelope, sealed it shut, and placed it carefully on top of the shoes. I closed the box slowly, like that might give me more time. But the truth was, time had already run out.
I sat very still on the edge of my bed, staring at the box, my hands in my lap. My mind ran in circles. Would she open it?
Would she even know it was from me? Or would Joel tell her it was from someone else — from him? Would she feel happy or confused or worse…
nothing at all?
The next day, I met Joel at a small café on the edge of town. It was the kind of place where people don’t ask questions. We sat outside.
I had the box on my lap. When he arrived, I stood and placed it gently on the table. “Please give this to her,” I said.
He didn’t look at me. He just nodded once, short and stiff. “How is she?” I asked, my voice tight.
“She’s fine,” he said, flat like always. “Does she still dance? Does she like school?”
He looked down at his watch.
“She’s busy. And yes, school’s fine.”
I knew that meant the conversation was over, but I didn’t move. I watched him shift, ready to leave.
As he stood, I reached out and caught his sleeve. “Please, Joel,” I whispered. “Just one day.
Let me see her for one day.”
He pulled back like I’d burned him. “You did this,” he snapped. “She chose me after the divorce.
And after the stunt you pulled sneaking onto my property, you’re lucky the court didn’t do worse.”
He turned and walked away before I could speak. I sat there long after he was gone, staring at the empty chair across from me. My cheeks burned.
My chest felt hollow. Maybe I had ruined everything. Maybe I was the villain in her story.
Maybe I was the problem. I came home and found a letter sitting on the porch, resting on the welcome mat like a quiet surprise. The afternoon sun made the white envelope glow.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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