The letters we leave behind are not always meant to be read.
Sometimes, they are written simply to survive.
When Clara Whitmore returns to her grandmother's house after a quiet passing, she expects the familiar work of closure: sorting boxes, labeling memories, deciding what to keep and what to let go. What she does not expect is a small shoebox hidden in the attic-filled with letters her grandmother never sent.
As Clara begins to read them, she uncovers a life her grandmother never spoke of: a love interrupted by war, choices shaped by silence, and a woman who learned to hold her truest self just out of reach. The letters reveal not only a past carefully hidden, but a pattern Clara recognizes in her own life-of waiting, restraint, and words left unsaid.
As mother and daughter confront what was buried for decades, The Letters We Leave Behind becomes a story about inheritance beyond blood: how silence is passed down, how love endures even when unfinished, and how understanding the past can finally loosen the grip it holds on the present.
Quiet, intimate, and emotionally resonant, this novella is for readers who love reflective fiction about family, memory, and the courage it takes to speak-sometimes long after the moment has passed.