Part 3:
“Men always say that when it’s exactly what we’re thinking.”
His expression crumpled.
“I was only trying to do something good.”
“With another woman’s handbag?”
He looked toward the folded paper.
“It’s too late to change any of this now.”
My hands trembled.
Before fear could stop me, I dialed the number.
The phone rang twice.
A woman answered.
“Millbrook Hospice Services. This is Anna.”
I froze.
Across the kitchen, Robert slowly sank into a chair.
“Hospice?” I asked.
“Yes. How may I help you?”
“My name is Elaine. I found this number inside a handbag.”
There was a long silence.
Then Anna spoke gently.
“Elaine… Margaret hoped you’d call.”
“Who is Margaret?”
“She was one of our patients.”
My heart skipped.
“She passed away two weeks ago.”
The room seemed to tilt beneath my feet.
“Why would her handbag be in my house?”
“Because she left it for you.”
Nothing made sense anymore.
Anna explained that Robert had secretly been working evening shifts at the hospice for months—transporting patients, cleaning rooms, helping wherever he could.
Margaret had grown very fond of him.
“She had no family left,” Anna said. “She wanted the handbag to belong to someone who would appreciate what it truly meant.”
“But she never met me.”
“No,” Anna replied. “But she knew everything Robert told her about you.”
I couldn’t speak.
Anna continued softly.
“He told Margaret how you always admired yellow roses but never bought any for yourself. He talked about how you stayed up late baking birthday cakes for everyone else. He even mentioned the way you hummed while folding laundry.”
Tears filled my eyes.
Robert had noticed every one of those little things.
He simply never knew how to show it.
“One more thing,” Anna added.
“Margaret left you a letter.”
I ended the call.
Without saying a word, Robert reached into his jacket and handed me an envelope addressed to me.
Inside was a handwritten letter.
Margaret explained that she had listened to Robert talk about me nearly every evening while he worked.
She wrote that a man who remembered the smallest details about his wife clearly loved her deeply—but fear had become his language.
She explained that Robert had grown up watching his family lose everything after disastrous financial decisions. Ever since childhood, he’d believed that spending money on unnecessary things could destroy a family’s future.
“Fear,” she wrote, “is a terrible way to express love.”
She told me her late husband had bought the handbag after forty years of marriage.
When she’d protested about the price, he’d smiled and said,
“Some things are worth far more than what they cost.”
Then came the final sentence.
“And Robert… if you’re reading this beside Elaine… buy your wife flowers.
Yes, they’ll die.
That’s exactly why they’re worth giving.”
By the time I reached the end, the page had become blurry with tears.
Across the table, Robert was crying too.
He admitted he’d taken the hospice job because he’d wanted to earn enough extra money to buy me the designer handbag himself without touching our savings or emergency fund.
Before he managed to save enough, Margaret had passed away and chosen me as the next owner of hers.
He confessed everything.
The childhood poverty.
The fear.
The constant belief that protecting tomorrow mattered more than celebrating today.
Then he looked at me and quietly admitted,
“In trying so hard to make sure you always felt secure… I accidentally made you feel invisible.”
He was right.
I had never doubted that Robert loved me.
But love that is never shown can slowly begin to feel absent.
A few weeks later, we invited our family back for dinner.
After dessert, I read Margaret’s letter aloud.
When I finished, nobody spoke for several moments.
Finally, Lila smiled through tears.
“I thought Robert was trying to impress everyone.”
Robert laughed softly.
“That would’ve been much easier.”
For the first time in years, everyone understood him.
Including me.
Today, Margaret’s handbag is still in my closet.
Not because it’s expensive.
Because her letter remains folded inside the hidden pocket.
And last Friday, Robert came home carrying one single yellow rose wrapped in clear plastic.
The price sticker was still attached.
“I know it’ll die,” he said with a shy smile.
I laughed until tears filled my eyes.
Then I placed it in a vase, knowing some gifts are valuable not because they last forever—but because someone finally chose to give them.