I always imagined our 10th anniversary would be perfect — candlelight, laughter, a meaningful exchange of gifts that showed how far we’d come together. I saved for months to buy my husband the watch he’d always dreamed of, imagining the joy on his face when he opened it. When he handed me a small plastic bottle of perfume in return, my heart quietly sank. It looked cheap, the kind of thing you’d grab at a gas station on impulse. I smiled anyway, trying to hide my disappointment.
It wasn’t about the price — it was the apparent lack of thought I imagined it represented. That night, after he fell asleep, I tucked the perfume away in a drawer and told myself I’d never wear it. I had no idea it would become the most meaningful gift he’d ever give me. Three weeks later, he was gone. No warning, no time to prepare — just a phone call that shattered my world. In the days that followed, I wandered through our home like a ghost.
Every corner reminded me of him — his mug still on the counter, his jacket hanging by the door. And in that drawer, untouched, sat the perfume. Each time I saw it, regret hit harder. I had dismissed something he gave with love, and now I’d never get the chance to tell him how much he meant to me. Months passed before I could bring myself to sort through his things. One afternoon, while going through drawers, I picked up the perfume again. My hands were shaking. I almost put it back — but the bottle slipped. It hit the floor with a sharp crack, the cap flying off.
As I knelt to pick it up, I noticed a small folded piece of paper hidden inside the cap. My breath caught. It was his handwriting. The note was short but broke me open: “I know this perfume isn’t much, but I’m saving for the necklace you’ve always wanted. Thank you for believing in me. You are my forever gift.” Now, the perfume sits on my nightstand. I never sprayed it. I can’t. It’s not guilt anymore — it holds something irreplaceable: his love, his thoughtfulness, the last message he ever left. Every night, it reminds me that love sometimes hides in the smallest gestures, waiting for us to notice.