05/17/2026
On 28 April 1947, rain tapped softly against the windows of a small house in Louisiana as evening settled over the neighborhood. Inside, an elderly woman sat alone in a chair near the glass, listening to the steady sound. Her husband had died during World War II before their son was old enough to remember his face clearly. Years had passed since the telegram arrived, yet rainy evenings still carried her back to that moment. She kept a photograph beside her chair — the edges worn from being held too often. Sometimes she spoke to it quietly. Not because she believed anyone could hear. But because silence felt heavier otherwise. Outside, cars passed through wet streets, and life continued normally beyond the walls of the house. Inside, time felt slower. The rain continued against the window, steady and soft, like a memory refusing to fade.