I wasn’t looking for her. But every December, as the lights went up and the days grew shorter, Sue always drifted back into my thoughts. Thirty-eight years after we lost each other, Christmas still carried her name. I’m Mark, 59 now. In college, Sue was the woman I thought I’d grow old with. We met over a dropped pen, became inseparable, and believed love would be enough. Then graduation changed everything. My father fell ill, and I moved home to help my mother. Sue stayed behind for a job she loved. We promised it was temporary.
At first, we survived on visits and letters. Then suddenly, she disappeared. No goodbye. No explanation. I wrote one last letter, telling her I loved her and would wait. I even called her parents, asking them to pass it on. I never heard back. Eventually, I assumed she’d moved on.I built another life. I married, had kids, and later divorced quietly. But Sue never fully left my heart.
Last winter, while searching the attic for decorations, a faded envelope fell from an old yearbook. It was addressed to me—in Sue’s handwriting—dated 1991. I’d never seen it. Inside, she explained she’d only just found my last letter. Her parents had hidden it and told her I wanted her to move on. She wrote she’d waited, hurt and confused, and begged me to answer. My hands shook as I searched for her online. I found her. I sent a message. Minutes later, she replied: “We need to meet.”

We met halfway at a café. The years fell away the moment she smiled. We talked for hours—about the lies, the lost time, the lives we’d lived apart. Christmas, she admitted, had always been the hardest. Now we walk together every weekend, catching up on decades we lost. This spring, we’re getting married. Sometimes love doesn’t disappear. Sometimes it just waits—until the truth finally finds its way home.