When my 16-year-old daughter went on a road trip with her dad’s new family, she sent me a postcard on day five saying they’d be staying two extra days. When she got home, she apologized for not telling me. I said, “But you did—you sent me a postcard.” Her face went pale. “Mom… we didn’t send anything.” We sat in silence, both unsettled. I grabbed the postcard from the drawer. The handwriting looked like hers—at least, that’s what I thought. She studied it, her hands trembling. “This isn’t mine.”
My stomach tightened. She explained they’d been in an area with no cell service and no access to mail. Neither she nor anyone from her dad’s family had sent it. For the first time, I examined the card closely. The date stamp was smudged, and there was no return address. Yet the message felt personal, written by someone who understood our relationship. I remembered the moment it arrived—just another piece of mail dropped off while I folded laundry.
Over the next few days, I casually asked neighbors, friends, even our mail carrier. No one knew anything. But the mail carrier did recall the postcard looking “a little old-fashioned,” like it had been sitting somewhere for years. That comment stayed with me. Later, while sorting through an old box of keepsakes, I found it—an identical postcard my late mother had bought decades ago from the same roadside attraction.
Suddenly everything made sense. The card had likely been mailed accidentally while I was cleaning and donating old items. Not a message from my daughter—but nothing sinister either. When I explained it to her, we both laughed with relief. The mystery postcard, in the end, became an unexpected moment that brought us closer.