An elderly woman, Mrs. Farida Khouri, called 911 one night, reporting a figure lurking in her backyard. When police arrived, they found her seated silently by the window, teacup trembling in her hand, eyes fixed on the dark garden.
No signs of break-in. Just fear—and something unresolved. I lived two houses down.
She used to offer me figs from her yard, always kind, always quiet. Officer Ramirez asked me to check on her in the coming days. I did.
She hadn’t slept. Said she heard footsteps on gravel. In daylight, I noticed fresh scuffs on the path near her fence.
No footprints out. She said nothing, but her face told me she knew more than she let on. Over the week, her fear grew.
She finally admitted: she thought the figure was her estranged son, Bassam. They hadn’t spoken in years, after a bitter fallout over money. “He blamed me,” she whispered.
“But I think he’s come back.” One night, I saw something move behind her house. The next morning, someone left a blank note on her doorstep with a single pressed persimmon leaf taped inside. She didn’t want the police involved.
“If it’s Bassam, I need to face him.” Then came the knock. It was her—barefoot, shaking. “He’s inside.” We found a chair pulled out by the window and the faint smell of smoke.
No one was there. But the next day, a Polaroid appeared on her table—taken from outside, showing her sipping tea, dated three days earlier. Finally, she opened up.
After her husband died, Bassam had begged her for help. She refused. He lost everything.
She never heard from him again—until now. One rainy night, I got a text from an unknown number: “She’s ready,” with a photo of her porch. I ran over.
The door was open. She sat calmly, suitcase at her feet. Across from her stood a man with a limp.
“You told me never to come back,” he said. “I was wrong,” she replied. “I’m sorry.”
She slid the suitcase toward him.
“Enough to start over. Not much—but it’s clean.” He didn’t say yes. But he didn’t walk away either.
That night, the fear left her house. Not because the police came—but because she faced the ghost of her past. Weeks later, she received a letter.
No return address. Inside: a pressed persimmon leaf and the words, “I’m trying, Mama.” She framed it. Sometimes all you get is a single thread of hope.
