My brother wanted to stay with me while he was home for the holidays. I said he was welcome to stay, so long as he didn’t bring his prosthetic leg into my house. I think it is creepy, and I have no idea where he got it. To be clear, my brother has two perfectly healthy legs still attached to his body. He called me again and asked, “You serious about the leg thing?”
I sighed into the phone. “Yeah, Rhys. It freaks me out. You don’t need it. Why keep it around?”
He was quiet for a second. “I told you, it belonged to someone special. I don’t expect you to get it. But fine, I’ll leave it behind.”
He sounded annoyed, but I figured we’d move past it once he got here. It had been over a year since I’d seen him—he moved across the country for work, and though we weren’t super close growing up, we always made time for holidays.
When he finally arrived, he seemed the same. Tall, easy smile, that lopsided grin that always made him look like he was mid-prank. He brought gifts, helped with groceries, and even cleared the driveway without me asking. It felt good to have someone else in the house for once.
Except… I couldn’t shake the feeling something was off.
The second night he was here, I walked past the guest room and noticed the door was slightly ajar. I peeked in and saw a large duffel bag on the floor—half-zipped. Something was sticking out. I leaned closer. It was the leg.
I knocked, irritated. “Rhys? You brought it, didn’t you?”
He was brushing his teeth but looked guilty as hell in the mirror. “Look, I kept it zipped. It’s not like it’s sitting on the kitchen table. Can you just let it be for a few days?”
I crossed my arms. “You promised.”
He spat, rinsed, and turned to face me. “It’s not a joke. I didn’t buy it from some garage sale, if that’s what you think.”
That made me pause. “Then where?”
Rhys looked down at the floor, jaw tight. “It belonged to Oliver.”
I blinked. “Oliver… your old army buddy?”
He nodded. “His prosthetic. After the explosion, he had to learn to walk again. That leg helped him rebuild his life. He used to joke it had a spirit of its own.”
That name punched me right in the stomach. I remembered Oliver. Always upbeat, even when the pain clearly tore him apart. Rhys had been stationed with him overseas. They were tight, like brothers. When Oliver passed last year—suddenly, from a heart condition—it hit Rhys hard.
“He left it to you?” I asked, softer now.
“He didn’t leave a will, but his mom told me he’d want me to have it. Said he always felt safe when it was nearby. And when I have it around, it’s like he’s still watching my back.”
I didn’t know what to say to that. My irritation melted into something messier—shame, maybe. But I still wasn’t sure how I felt about sleeping under the same roof as a ghost leg.
The next morning, I found Rhys outside, brushing snow off the porch. He didn’t say anything at first.
“I didn’t mean to be a jerk about it,” I said.
He shrugged. “It’s fine. Not everyone’s gonna get it.”
“I get that it matters to you. That’s what counts.”
We had a pretty good day after that. Watched old movies, made a ridiculous amount of hot chocolate, and played cards like we were kids again. That night, as we were cleaning up, the power flickered out.
Of course.
Rhys grabbed a flashlight from his bag and I lit a few candles. We huddled in the living room, layered in hoodies and socks.
Then came a thump.
We both froze. It sounded like something falling in the hallway.
“You hear that?” I whispered.
Rhys nodded. “Stay here.”
He stood, flashlight in hand, and crept toward the noise. I followed behind, because there was no way I was sitting alone with just a candle.
The guest room door was wide open.
Inside, the duffel bag was upright—but the zipper was undone. The prosthetic leg wasn’t where it had been.
“You sure it was zipped?” I asked.
Rhys didn’t answer. He crouched and scanned the floor.
“Maybe it fell out,” I suggested. “The thump?”
We looked under the bed. Nothing. Checked the closet. Nothing. But then we both turned and saw it—propped against the far corner of the hallway, like it had been placed there deliberately.
I backed up. “Okay, nope. That’s too weird.”
Rhys stared at it, unmoving. “I didn’t put it there.”
I could tell he meant it. There was a tension in the air now, thick and humming.
“I think,” he said slowly, “maybe Ollie’s trying to tell me something.”
“Tell you what? That I’m a bad hostess?” I tried to joke, but my voice cracked.
Rhys picked up the leg gently, like it might shatter. “Maybe he’s saying I should stop dragging him around.”
We didn’t talk much more that night. The power came back on after an hour, and we both turned in early.
But the next morning, Rhys was up before me, dressed and ready.
“I’m heading to Oliver’s hometown,” he said, over coffee.
“What? Why?”
He looked calmer than I’d seen him all week. “To give the leg back. To his mom. I think I’ve been carrying it for me, not him.”
I nodded. “Makes sense.”
“I didn’t want to forget him. But I think… it’s time I remember him a different way.”
That day, he drove three hours to deliver the prosthetic to Oliver’s mother. He said she cried when he handed it over—said it felt like getting a part of her son back.
He stayed for tea, swapped stories, and by the time he came home, something had shifted in him. He was lighter.
The rest of the holidays passed without any more ghostly bumps in the night. Rhys laughed more, cooked with me, and even tolerated my terrible carol singing. And I realized then that sometimes we hold onto things because we’re afraid letting go means forgetting.
But it doesn’t.
It just means we’re making space for a new kind of memory.
Rhys flew back to Portland after New Year’s. We hugged at the airport, tighter than we used to.
“I’ll be back next year,” he said, “and don’t worry—I’ll leave the limbs at home.”
“Appreciate it,” I smiled. “But… you know… if you had brought it, I think I’d have been okay.”
He chuckled. “Too late. You’re never living that down.”
The house felt quieter after he left, but not empty.
A week later, I got a letter in the mail. It was from Oliver’s mom.
Inside was a small photo of Oliver in uniform, standing tall—real leg and prosthetic side by side. He was smiling, hand resting on Rhys’s shoulder.
There was a note on the back: “Thank you for letting Rhys find peace. He loved your cocoa, by the way.”
I laughed out loud. Then cried.
Funny how healing works. Sometimes it needs time. Sometimes it needs cocoa. And sometimes… it needs an old plastic leg in a duffel bag to finally come full circle.
If this story touched something in you, don’t forget to share it with someone who needs a reminder: memories live in our hearts, not in things. And sometimes, letting go is the kindest thing we can do.
❤️ Like and share if you believe even the weirdest stories can carry the deepest love.





