I carried the battered suitcase into my living room and placed it on the table like it might fall apart if I touched it too hard. It looked ordinary at first glance, just old leather with scratched corners and faded stitching. For a moment, I just stood there, thinking about Ezra and our Sundays that always ended with coffee and quiet conversation. I never saw myself as anything more than a helpful neighbor.
We were never close in the way families are close. Just steady, familiar, and consistent. I brought his groceries every Sunday without fail, and he always insisted I sit down for a few minutes before leaving. I thought it was simply his way of being polite, nothing deeper than that. Now, holding his suitcase, it felt like I had missed something important.
Ezra had always been private. He never spoke much about his past or his family. I respected that silence, never pushing for answers. I assumed he liked it that way—simple, quiet, undisturbed.
That’s why the suitcase felt so out of place, like it belonged to a version of him I never truly knew.Still, I finally unlatched it-
