For my wedding, my grandmother gave me a strange gift—her old, torn, and faded sofa. My husband hated it. “It doesn’t belong in our modern home,” he said, and I agreed to store it in the garage, mostly out of respect for her. Still, something about it always reminded me of her warmth, so I never threw it out. Eleven years later, after a painful and messy divorce, I moved out with almost nothing. My life felt like it had crumbled. One day, while unpacking in my small new place, I remembered that forgotten sofa and decided to have it repaired. I didn’t have much, but it felt like a piece of home—of her.
When the repair guy came to pick it up, he examined it and shook his head. “It’s really old and in bad shape. It’s going to take time,” he said. I told him there was no rush. I wasn’t expecting anything more than a fixed memory. The next day, he called me—his voice trembling. “Please come over. Right now.”
I rushed to his workshop, heart pounding. When I arrived, he showed me what he had found hidden deep inside the sofa’s frame: stacks of old bills, a few gold coins, and a yellowed envelope addressed to me. Inside was a letter from my grandmother.