John finds who his grandparents were within their letters. |
Prompt ▼ September 28, 1970 My Paul, Nearly three years. Thatās how long itās been since I last saw you, touched you, heard you laugh in person instead of only in memory. Nearly three years of writing letters, so many now that Iāve lost count. Some Iāve mailed. Some Iāve tucked away in drawers or boxes; afraid theyād vanish into the void. But I keep writing. It makes me feel close to you, like Iām leaving a trail you can follow home. Iāve thrown myself into work since youāve been gone. You remember when I first took the job as a court reporter just to help with bills while you were away? I never thought it would become my calling. But sitting there, recording every word, watching how peopleās lives rise and fall on the truth or the lies they tell has opened my eyes, Paul. Thereās so much injustice in the world, so much that people want to hide, hoping no one is paying attention. I am paying attention. Your absence made me braver than I ever knew I could be. Iāve made a few friends at the courthouse, women who, like me, are waiting for word on husbands lost to war. We share coffee and stories, but beneath it all, we share the same hope: that weāll see our men walk back through the door. And I donāt just sit and wait, Paul. You know me. I call. I write. I hound the government, pressing for updates. Pushing them until they remember that behind the files and reports and missing-in-action stamps are lives; yours, mine, ours. I wonāt let them forget you. Your niece, little Paula Hope, turned one on September 19th. Sheās walking now, tiny wobbly steps with curious hands always going where she shouldnāt be. Sheās so smart like sheās been here before and her age is just holding her back. Julia says sheās got her stubbornness and your quiet watchfulness. I see pieces of you in her, and it hurts in the sweetest way. Sometimes, when the world feels too heavy, I imagine weāre together again while Iām cooking and singing the Beatles song āGet Backā around the kitchen, off-key and loud, to make you laugh. I imagine youād say, āSometimes people just need a push to get back to where they once belonged.ā I know itās been a long time. I know youāre out there somewhere, fighting your way back in your own way. Just donāt forget...weāre still here. Still waiting. So, hereās your push, Paul. Get back. Get back to me. Thereās still a spot in the bed where you belong. Still a teacup on the shelf I wonāt use until you come home. Still a part of me that only makes sense when youāre near. I love you. I always will. Come home. Yours forever, Vera ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() John found the letter tucked between two thinner envelopes, folded neatly in a way that suggested it had been opened many times creases soft from fingers that had gone back to it again and again. He could almost imagine Vera sitting at the kitchen table, re-reading her own words, waiting for an answer that might never come. He sank onto an old trunk, unfolding the page slowly. The tone hit him immediately gentler than the others, but charged with a longing that was sharper now. Less poetic. More achingly real. It was all there: the birth of his aunt Paula, a wedding, a family trying to move forward with a chair left empty. And beneath it, Veraās quiet but unshakable refusal to give up hope. Johnās eyes skimmed the lines: āThereās still a spot in the bed where you belong..ā āStill a teacup on the shelf I wonāt use until you come home..ā He read those lines four times. He thought about the chipped blue and white teacup in the back of Grandma Veraās old China cabinet. It had always seemed out of place delicate, unused. Now he knew why. The house around him creaked gently, wood groaning with age and memory. He imagined Vera writing that letter, pen scratching across paper, heart stretched thin between hope and heartbreak. And then he smiled, just faintly. "Get back," sheād written. The Beatles lyric felt like less of a song now and more of a prayer. For the first time, John realized: This wasnāt just a story about love. It was a map. A roadmap back to something lost. His grandfather had always hummed Beatles tunes under his breath, like they were stitched into the rhythm of his life. And now, John saw what they really were breadcrumbs. Sentimental echoes. Little reminders of a man who had seen hell, who had nearly been erased by it, and who had found his way back through memory, music, and one womanās unwavering belief. John folded the letter carefully and added it to the growing stack beside him. This wasnāt over. There was more still to find. And something maybe Paul himself was pulling him forward. Just like the song said. Get back. Get back to where you once belonged. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() October 19, 1970 U.S. Military Hospital, Somewhere in the Pacific My Vera, I donāt even know how to begin this letter except to say: Iām alive. Iām free. Let those words sit with you for a moment, sweetheart. Let them bloom. We were rescued. I donāt know how much I can share or how long this letter will take to reach you, but I couldnāt wait. Weāre still in a restricted zone, and they wonāt let us make calls just yet. But the minute I had access to paper and pen, I asked for both. I had to write you first. Before anyone else. Because itās you, Vera. Itās always been you. Right now, Iām in a hospital bed with more tubes in me than I care to count, and a nurse who keeps scolding me for sitting up to write this. I keep telling her, āThereās someone waiting for me. Sheās been waiting for years. I owe her this.ā They say my vitals are good. My weightās coming back. My voice is still a bit rough, but Iāve got enough breath in me to sing a little Beatles tune under my breath. Youād laugh at how off key I sound right now. I sound like a scratched-up record. Vera, I donāt know how I made it through some days in that camp. But I know why I did. It was us. Two of us, riding nowhere, spending someoneās hard-earned pay⦠Two of us chasing paper letters across oceans and silence. Two of us whispering āI love youā into places we didnāt know weād ever escape. Iāll be coming home soon. Thatās what they tell me. A few more weeks of recovery, then reassignment, and then...us, again. I donāt know what Iāll look like to you now. Iāve seen too much. Felt too much. Iāve aged a hundred years, Vera. But I promise you this: My love for you? Itās untouched. Stronger. Clearer. And ready to come home. Weāll go walking again, just the two of us. No more guards. No more cages. Just you and me, singing old songs and laughing like fools. Maybe weāll even get lost on purpose, just so we can find our way back together. Iāll see you soon, my heart. Wait just a little longer. Iām almost there. Forever and always, Paul Word Count: 1246 |