####### Video #######

“The Letters She Never Sent”

Clara had always written letters — dozens, hundreds — but never mailed a single one.

Each letter was addressed to her husband, James, a soldier who had been declared missing in action 12 years earlier during a peacekeeping mission overseas. No body. No final goodbye. Just a folded flag and a government-issued statement: “Presumed dead.”

But Clara never believed it. Not entirely.

She kept writing. Birthdays. Anniversaries. Even just ordinary days when loneliness crept in like fog. She poured her soul into each envelope, stored them in a wooden box, and waited for a miracle she knew might never come.

Everyone told her to move on. Friends drifted away. Her sister begged her to date again. But Clara just smiled, touched the locket around her neck, and said, “Not yet.”

Then, one rainy Tuesday, her doorbell rang.

On the porch stood a man with tired eyes and trembling hands. A long scar crossed his cheek. His uniform was faded, his posture unsure. Clara stared. The box of letters fell from her hands.

“James?”

His voice cracked. “I kept your name alive for 12 years, Clara. It was the only thing that kept me alive.”

He had been a prisoner of war — rescued only months earlier, too weak to travel. It took time, but he found his way back.

Back to her.

That night, Clara opened the wooden box. Together, they read every single letter by candlelight. Some made them laugh. Some made them cry. But the last one was the most special — because it was the only one she didn’t have to write alone.

####### Rewarded #######

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