For my Harper. My greatest gift.
Harper touched the ink as if it were sacred. The passport bore another name. Natalie Brooks.
Roland handed her the envelope. “This is from her.”
Harper opened it carefully. Her mother’s handwriting flowed across the pages.
“My beloved daughter. If you are reading this, it means you are ready. I left to protect you. I was threatened. I made a choice that broke my heart. I built a new life under another name. I never stopped thinking of you. If you wish to find me, come to a café in Savannah called The Driftwood Room. Every Sunday morning I sit by the window. I wait for you. I love you forever. Mother.”
Harper’s breath shook. “She is alive,” she whispered.
Her phone buzzed. Detective Morgan Hale.
“We opened a locked safe belonging to the Calloway family. There was another letter from your mother. And a recent photograph. She is alive. You can find her.”
Two days later, Harper stood beside Iris’s hospital bed.
“Go,” Iris said, squeezing her hand. “Bring my daughter home.”
Sunday morning in Savannah smelled of salt and jasmine. Cobblestone streets glowed under soft sunlight. Harper stood before a small café with white curtains and weathered wood. The Driftwood Room. Her heart thundered.
She opened the door. Inside, a silver haired woman sat by the window with a coffee cup in her hands. Her eyes lifted. They met Harper’s. Time froze.
The woman stood slowly, tears already forming. “Harper,” she breathed.
Harper’s voice cracked. “Mom.”
They crossed the space between them and fell into each other’s arms. Years of absence dissolved in that embrace. They wept. They laughed. They held each other as though afraid to let go.
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