A call from a stranger.
A letter left unread.
A love you don’t remember—but that never forgot you.
She says she’s a lawyer.
But she knows too much—about him, about you, about what you once had.
This wasn’t supposed to happen again… and yet here you are.
When the wind chimes ring and the roses fall, will you open the letter—or walk away?
This isn’t just the beginning of a letter. It’s the continuation of something fate refused to end.
A Strange Number
It was early evening when my phone rang.
Unknown number. San Francisco area code.
I almost let it go to voicemail, but something made me answer.
“Hi, this is Irene Harris. I’m an attorney.”
Her voice was calm, professional—but there was something else there too. A little urgency, maybe. Or something more personal.
“Are you sure you’ve got the right number?” I asked, half-joking.
“I’m sure,” she said. “You’re involved in a rather... unusual inheritance case.”
I glanced out the window. The sky was growing heavy, like it knew something I didn’t.
“We need to meet. Tomorrow, 10 a.m., downtown. Bring the letter.”
“What letter?”
She didn’t answer.
The call ended. I just stood there for a moment, holding the phone, realizing the fridge door was still open behind me. Cold air drifted out, along with a dozen unanswered questions.
Her Name Was Irene
The rain had been threatening all afternoon when she called.
“I’m Irene Harris,” she said. “A lawyer. But that’s probably not the most important thing right now.”
Her voice was soft but steady, like someone used to delivering complicated truths.
“This is about something you may not remember,” she continued. “But it remembers you.”
I let out a breath. “You realize you sound like you’re quoting a movie.”
She laughed, gently. “Maybe we’re in one.”
“I’d like to meet,” she said. “Tomorrow morning, ten o’clock. Linden Street Café—the one with the wind chimes out front.”
I hesitated. “Why me?”
“Because you’re the only one who can open the letter he left behind.”
“He?”
“If I couldn’t find you,” she said, “I was supposed to destroy it.”
“But you did find me.”
There was a pause. “So I didn’t.”
She hung up.
Outside, the first drop of rain tapped the glass just as I lowered the phone. It sounded like a knock.
Wind Chimes and Roses
Linden Street had cleared up by morning, like the rain had just been a test.
The café looked just as she’d described it—tiny, quiet, with a single wind chime hanging from the awning. It sang softly in the breeze.
She was already there, sitting in the corner, back to the window. Morning light touched her shoulders like something from a dream. Green coat, calm eyes, and that same distant look—like she knew something I hadn’t remembered yet.
“You came,” she said.
I sat down, ordered us two coffees.
“You still haven’t told me who he is,” I said.
She didn’t answer right away. Instead, she took a worn envelope from her bag and placed it gently in front of me.
“You haven’t read it?” I asked.
She shook her head. “It’s not for me. I was only asked to keep it safe… and find you.”
I opened it. The paper inside was yellowed at the edges, but the handwriting was clear. I knew that handwriting—though I couldn’t say why.
“I knew you’d forget me,” the letter began.
“But I never forgot you. Maybe we missed each other by minutes, or lifetimes. That train ride, that dream, that glass of red wine—you once said fate was just a pretty excuse. But I believed. Now I’m giving the memories back to you. It’s your choice if we begin again.”
I felt my breath catch.
“This time,” I whispered, “I think I will.”
She looked at me with something like relief—and something deeper, too.
“You’re not just a lawyer, are you?”
She smiled. “You always ask me that. Every time.”
Outside, the wind chime rang again, and a single rose petal floated down from somewhere above.