Alice gestured toward the delicate gold clasp of the necklace she wore—a gift from Rajesh decades ago that she had never quite been able to unfasten herself. As I stepped behind her, the scent of jasmine, the same scent from the St. Xavier’s library in 1964, filled the space between us. Wedding planning resources
My hands, though weathered by years of engineering work, were steady as I worked the tiny mechanism. But as the necklace came away, Alice didn’t turn around. She remained still, staring at a small, battered tin box sitting on the nightstand.
“Brian,” she whispered. “Before we start this new life, there is something you need to see. Something I found in Rajesh’s desk after the funeral. It’s the reason I couldn’t look for you for sixty-one years.”
The Letter That Never Arrived
She opened the tin. Inside was a piece of notebook paper, yellowed and brittle, folded into a tight square. I recognized my own handwriting immediately—the slanted, hurried script of a seventeen-year-old boy in agony.
“Alice, meet me at the station at midnight. I have the money from the cricket trophy and my grandmother’s savings. We can go to Mumbai. We can find a way. If you aren’t there, I’ll know you’ve chosen the life they want for you. I won’t ever ask again.”
I felt the blood drain from my face. “I waited at that station until the sun came up, Alice. I thought… I thought you didn’t love me enough to leave.”
“I never saw this,” Alice said, her voice cracking. “Rajesh found it. He had come to my house to finalize the dowry with my father that evening. He intercepted your messenger. He didn’t just take my future; he took my choice.”