She said, “It’s time you know the truth. Sam had… a box.”
Confused, I asked, “A box?”
She nodded. “Yes. A small wooden box. He kept it in his dresser, locked, and never let anyone touch it. He told me it was private, part of his past. I never asked—until he was gone. I opened it last night.”
She handed it to me.
Inside were dozens of folded letters, each addressed to our son.
Dates spanning from the day after the accident… to just a week before Sam passed.
I opened one.
“Hey buddy,
I saw a boy on a skateboard today. He reminded me of you. I cried in the car afterward. I don’t cry in front of people—never have. But I miss you so much it physically hurts…”
Each letter was like that. Raw. Grieving. Honest. He never stopped mourning. He just didn’t know how to show it on the outside.
I sat there in silence, holding a truth that shattered everything I thought I knew.
He hadn’t been cold. He had been broken.
And he carried that grief alone… all those years.