I ordered a brand new little purse, and found a well-used and scuffed one instead. But look what I found inside it! It’s karma, girls!
The purse was supposed to be a sleek black crossbody—leather, gold accents, trendy, the kind of thing you wear to brunch just to look like your life is together. It was a birthday treat to myself after a long month of extra shifts. When the package arrived, I practically ran to my apartment like a kid with candy. But the second I tore it open, my smile dropped.
The bag looked like it had been through some things. The corners were frayed, the zipper was loose, and the inside smelled faintly like cinnamon gum and stale perfume. I checked the shipping label twice to make sure it hadn’t been rerouted from a lost-and-found. Nope, addressed to me. From the company. I was fuming.
I sat on my couch, half-laughing in that “I might cry” way, scrolling through the return policy when I heard something rattle inside. Curiosity overrode irritation. I reached in and found a small, zipped compartment at the back—one I hadn’t noticed at first because it was tucked beneath a flap. My fingers brushed against something smooth and cool.
It was a key. Just a simple house key on a thin chain, tangled with a folded, yellowing paper. I unfolded it, expecting maybe a receipt, or something boring like an old grocery list. But what I found had my heart skipping a beat.
It was a letter. Handwritten. The ink had smudged in some places like it had been clutched during a good cry or caught in the rain. The top said: To whoever finds this—if you do, I hope you’re kinder than I was.
I stared at it, stunned. There were no names. Just a few lines about regrets, choices, and something about a box in an attic. “Flat 3A, 19 Alderney Lane,” it ended with. I blinked. That was less than ten miles from me.
Now, I’m not usually the type to go full Nancy Drew. I have laundry piles taller than me and commitment issues with TV shows longer than two seasons. But something about the handwriting… something about that line, “I hope you’re kinder than I was”, sat in my chest like a stone.
So, I tossed the purse into my tote, grabbed my keys, and drove to Alderney Lane before I could talk myself out of it.
The building was old. Ivy crawled up one side like it had claimed it decades ago. I rang the bell for 3A. Nothing. I waited a bit, then tried knocking, then pacing, then knocking again, this time louder.
Still nothing.
I was about to leave when an older woman from the flat across the hall cracked her door open. “You looking for Lydia?” she asked, eyeing me suspiciously over her cat-print robe.
I explained, briefly, that I’d received a package with something that might belong to someone who lived—or used to live—there.
“Lydia moved out months ago,” she said, squinting. “Left in the middle of the night. Didn’t take much. Just… disappeared.”
That stopped me. “She just left everything?”
“Yep. Landlord came by two weeks later, cleaned it out. Told me she hadn’t paid rent in three months. Real shame. Sweet girl but… troubled.”
That word. Troubled. It always carries a weight people don’t want to explain.
I asked if she had any forwarding address or way to contact her, but the woman shook her head. “All I know is, the landlord lives two streets over. Name’s Barry Miller. Try him.”
So I did.
Barry was a gruff man in his sixties who had the temperament of a caffeine-deprived bouncer. He didn’t trust me at first, especially when I asked about a girl who used to live in his building and might’ve left behind a mysterious note and key.
But once I showed him the purse, and the letter, something in him softened. He told me the unit was empty, but if I wanted to look around, I could. “There’s an attic door. Hard to spot. Maybe that’s what she meant in the letter.”
The apartment was bare. Walls stripped, floor scuffed. It didn’t smell like anyone had lived there in months. But in the hallway closet, behind a loose panel, I found the attic crawl space. And in there—a single dusty box. Unmarked.
I sat on the floor and pulled it open.
Inside were photos. Letters. A few trinkets. A charm bracelet with missing pieces, a dried corsage, an old flip phone with a cracked screen. One photo in particular caught my eye: a young woman, probably Lydia, with another girl who looked strikingly similar—maybe a sister? They were laughing, mid-motion, like someone had called their name as the photo snapped.
There was also a diary.
And here’s where things took a turn I didn’t expect.
The diary—well, it wasn’t really a diary. It was more like confessions. The kind you never say out loud.
Lydia had a younger sister named Clara. They’d grown up in foster care after being separated from their mother. Lydia had practically raised Clara, sacrificing college, jobs, and relationships for her. But somewhere along the way, resentment started to grow. Clara got into a good university, started building a life—and pulled away.
Lydia’s entries spiraled between heartbreak, guilt, and what she called her “one unforgivable act.”
It wasn’t spelled out right away, but entry by entry, a story unfolded. When Clara was twenty-two, she got pregnant. The father bailed. Lydia, panicked at the idea of her sister going through what their own mother had, convinced her to terminate the pregnancy. Pressured her, actually. Manipulated her. That’s how Lydia wrote it.
And Clara did.
But she never forgave her.
That was the beginning of the end. They stopped speaking. Lydia moved out of state, then drifted back. She tried to make amends, but Clara wouldn’t answer her calls. The last entry was dated two years ago. It said, “If this purse ever finds someone new, maybe they’ll understand what it feels like to carry something you can’t give back.”
I sat there for a long time. Reading. Re-reading. Wondering if Clara ever got the apology Lydia wrote in every single page. Wondering if she even knew how much her sister regretted it all.
Then, I had an idea.
The flip phone. Maybe, just maybe, there was still something on it.
I charged it at home with an old cable I found in my junk drawer. It was slow, ancient, but eventually powered up. To my surprise, it still had one contact saved: “Clara 💛.” And even more shocking—recent texts.
Lydia: I’m sorry. Please.
Lydia: I have something for you. If you want it.
Lydia: I left it in the purse. You’ll know.
She meant to send it to Clara.
That purse wasn’t supposed to come to me.
I sat there, blinking like an idiot at the screen. Then I did the completely unhinged thing: I texted her.
“Hi Clara. I don’t know you, but I think I have something that was meant for you. Please call me if this number still works.” I left my name and number, then stared at the wall like a stalker in a true crime doc.
I didn’t expect a reply.
But she called the next morning.
Her voice was hesitant, young but steady. “You have Lydia’s purse?” she asked.
I told her everything. From the scuffed leather to the attic box. I didn’t sugarcoat it. I figured if she’d ignored Lydia for years, she had her reasons. But she was silent for a long time. Then said, “Where are you?”
We met that afternoon at a coffee shop near her office. She was sharp, composed, in a navy pantsuit and no-nonsense heels. But when I handed her the box, her hands shook.
She didn’t open it right away. She just held it like something sacred.
“I thought she hated me,” she whispered.
“She thought you hated her,” I said.
Then she started crying.
We sat there for almost two hours. She told me more about their childhood—how they used to sleep in the same bed because Lydia was scared of storms. How Lydia skipped prom to work overtime so Clara could buy a dress. How Clara did regret the abortion—but more than that, she regretted letting her sister carry the blame alone.
She admitted she got the texts. She saw them. But pride, pain—whatever it was—kept her from replying. “I didn’t think it mattered anymore,” she said.
Now, it did.
We stayed in touch after that. A few months later, Clara called me to say Lydia had been found—she was alive, living under a different name in a women’s shelter, trying to get clean. The diary didn’t mention addiction, but Clara said the guilt had taken its toll, and Lydia had fallen into bad company and worse habits.
But she was getting help. And now, she had her sister back.
The purse had made it to the wrong person—but maybe, in the right way.
And me? I got my refund for the purse, don’t worry. But I didn’t send it back. I kept it, scratches and all. It sits in my closet now, with the note folded neatly inside.
Sometimes, life drops something messy in your lap, and your first instinct is to get rid of it. But if you look closely—really look—there might be a second chance tangled in the zipper.
Karma isn’t always about punishment. Sometimes, it’s about deliverance.
If this story made you pause, or made you think of someone you should reach out to—share it. You never know who might be carrying something they don’t know how to let go of.
And hey—like this post too. Life’s messy, but sometimes, the scuffed-up things bring us the biggest miracles.





