I inherited my parents’ house after they passed, so I started renovating it. Yesterday, the contractor called me over, he’d found a small safe behind the wall. Inside were 2 wedding rings, a ferry ticket and a letter that said, “If you have found this, the plan failed.” I showed the letter to my uncle, turns out he went pale the moment he read it.
He asked if he could hold onto it for a while, saying it brought back too many memories. When I asked what kind of memories, he just shook his head and said, “It’s not my story to tell. But maybe… maybe it’s time you found out.”
That night, I couldn’t stop thinking about the note. “If you have found this, the plan failed.” What plan? And whose?
The next morning, I drove to see Mrs. Brennan, my mom’s childhood best friend. She used to live next door and still visited sometimes. I showed her the letter and the ticket.
She stared at the items for a long time before whispering, “So they never made it.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
She looked at me like she was deciding whether or not to tell me something that had been locked away for decades. Then, with a sigh, she started to talk.
Back in the early 80s, my mom wasn’t married to my dad. She was engaged to someone else. A man named Samuel. Samuel wasn’t from here—he was from Nova Scotia, and he’d come down to our town to work on the railway projects for the summer. They met at a dance. Fell in love too fast, too deep.
“Your mother was radiant when she was with him,” Mrs. Brennan said. “Like she was lit from the inside.”
But my grandfather didn’t approve. Samuel didn’t come from money. And he wasn’t planning to stay—at least, that’s what everyone thought. But what they didn’t know was that Samuel and my mom had planned to run away together.
They were going to take a ferry, start fresh in Halifax. He had a job lined up. They’d bought rings. Secret ones. Not engagement rings—wedding bands. They were going to elope.
I sat there, stunned. That ferry ticket in the safe? It was dated July 14th, 1984.
“Something happened that day,” Mrs. Brennan continued. “Your mother never spoke about it. One day she was glowing and full of plans, the next she was a shell of herself. A week later, she started dating your father. But she was never quite the same.”
The pieces started falling into place. The safe. The rings. The failed plan. But what happened? Why didn’t she go?
I returned home with more questions than answers.
That evening, I confronted my uncle again. This time, I demanded the truth.
He finally gave in and sat me down. “Your mom asked me for help that summer,” he said. “She wanted me to cover for her—tell your grandparents she was spending the weekend at a friend’s. I agreed. She left the night before the ferry.”
“But then?” I asked.
“She didn’t show up the next day. Samuel waited. Called the house. I picked up. She wasn’t home. No one had heard from her. I drove to the bus stop where she said she’d meet him, but she wasn’t there. I checked the train station, even the ferry terminal. Nothing.”
My uncle told me that Samuel eventually left town, broken. He never contacted anyone again.
I asked him if he thought she changed her mind.
He shook his head. “Your mom was stubborn. If she said she was going to do something, she did it. I never believed she just… bailed.”
Something felt off. My mom had kept that ferry ticket. Those rings. That letter. Why would she hide those things if she had just changed her mind?
That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept picturing my mom, young and in love, writing that note with hope… and fear. And then something stopping her.
I started looking through old papers, journals, anything she might’ve left behind. In a dusty box in the attic, I found an envelope marked “FORGIVENESS.”
Inside was a torn photograph of her and Samuel at the lake. And another letter.
“If you ever find this, I hope you’ll understand. I didn’t leave because I stopped loving him. I left because I didn’t want him to live in fear.”
What fear?
I read on.
“The night before we were supposed to leave, Dad found the rings. I lied, said they were for a friend. He didn’t believe me. He said if I ran away, Samuel would end up in jail—or worse. He knew people. He said I’d be ruining Samuel’s life. So I stayed. I thought I was protecting him.”
My hands trembled. My grandfather had threatened her. And Samuel.
That’s why she never showed.
She sacrificed her happiness to protect the man she loved.
I thought that was the end of the story.
Until two weeks later, I got a Facebook message from someone named Annie Mallard. The last name rang a bell.
She said she lived in Halifax. That her father’s name was Samuel. That she found an old box of letters he wrote to a woman named Claire—my mother’s name.
I told her everything.
Turns out, Samuel had never stopped writing. He mailed letters to my mom for a year after he left, but none of them ever reached her. We think my grandfather intercepted them.
Samuel passed away ten years ago. Never married. Annie was adopted—his goddaughter’s child whom he raised like his own. She said he spoke of a Claire often. Always wondering what could have been.
We met two weeks later. She brought some of the letters. In them, Samuel told my mom he waited for hours at the ferry. That he never stopped loving her. That he’d come back for her if she wanted him to. But he never got a reply.
My mom never knew.
She lived her life quietly. Married my father, had me. Maybe she found contentment, eventually. But love? I think she left that behind in 1984.
Annie and I became close. It was strange how alike we were. Both children of broken love stories. Both trying to piece together something that got lost.
Then, something unexpected happened.
A few months later, while continuing the renovations, I found a second envelope hidden under a loose floorboard in the master bedroom. It had my name on it.
It was dated just six months before my mom died.
“If you’re reading this, I’m gone. And maybe it’s better that way. I never wanted to burden you with the past. But I owe you the truth.”
She wrote about Samuel. About their plan. About how she dreamed of that life every time she heard ferry horns in the distance. How she sometimes imagined what I would’ve been like if he had been my father.
But then she said something that hit me hard.
“I don’t regret having you. You are the greatest part of the life I chose. I just wish I had the strength to live with less fear.”
I cried reading that.
And that night, I made a decision.
The house no longer felt like a place of shadows. I wanted to turn it into something living again.
I turned it into a bed and breakfast. I named it The Ferry House. The first room I finished was decorated with a photo of a ferry, an old ring, and a copy of the letter that started it all—framed on the wall, telling the story of love interrupted.
Guests loved it.
Some cried. Some left notes saying it reminded them to take chances. To speak up. To forgive.
But the most rewarding part?
A woman in her 60s came to stay one weekend. She looked at the photos on the wall, especially the one of my mom and Samuel at the lake, and gasped.
She said, “I knew them. I worked at the post office back then. I always thought it was odd that her mail would sometimes be picked up by her father directly.”
She confirmed what we suspected. My grandfather had intercepted Samuel’s letters.
And then she gave me something I never expected.
She had one letter—one that slipped through. She found it years later tucked behind a shelf at the post office when they were cleaning out old bins.
It was addressed to my mom. From Samuel. It was postmarked a year after she was supposed to leave.
In it, he wrote:
“I still keep the rings. I don’t know if you’ll ever write back. But if you do, I’ll be waiting at the same ferry terminal, July 14th, every year.”
My heart broke all over again.
I don’t know if he went every year. But that one letter gave me an idea.
This year, on July 14th, Annie and I went to the old ferry terminal. We brought flowers, and the rings.
We stood quietly by the dock.
An older man nearby asked what we were doing. We told him, briefly.
He smiled sadly and said, “I used to see a man waiting here every year. Alone. Always looking out at the water. Now I know why.”
I felt something shift in that moment. Like a circle had finally closed.
That night, I placed the rings in a small glass case on the B&B’s front desk. A plaque reads: “For all the love stories that never got their ending—but still changed everything.”
And maybe that’s the lesson here.
That love, even when it doesn’t go as planned, leaves behind something real. Something lasting.
My mom never got her ferry ride. Samuel never got his answer. But in a strange way, they still created something beautiful.
Me. Annie. This story.
And maybe, just maybe, someone else will read it and be inspired to write that letter, take that risk, or make that call.
Because sometimes, the biggest regrets aren’t the things we did… but the things we were too afraid to do.
So if you’ve made it this far—share this story.
Tell someone you love them.
And never let fear write your ending.
Like and share if this touched you. Maybe someone out there needs a nudge to chase their ferry.





