My best friend, Ava, died in a car crash seven years ago.
At least, that’s what everyone believed.
Her phone was never found. The police said it was probably destroyed in the fire. I tried to accept that. I tried to accept a lot of things.
Last night, at 11:47 p.m., my phone buzzed.
It was her number.
My heart nearly stopped.
The message was a photo—Ava and me at her 16th birthday party, faces smeared with frosting, laughing like the world could never hurt us.
My hands trembled as I typed: Who is this?
Three dots appeared.
I couldn’t breathe.
Then the reply came:
Check your email.
I stared at the screen, my pulse roaring in my ears. This had to be a cruel prank. Someone hacking an old number. Some sick joke.
Still, I opened my laptop.
There it was.
An email from an unfamiliar address. Subject line: For Mia.
My chest tightened. Only Ava called me Mia. Everyone else used my full name, Amelia.
I clicked it.
Inside was a short video.
It showed Ava sitting in what looked like a small, plain room. Her hair was shorter, darker. She looked older. Tired—but alive.
“Hey, Mia,” she said softly. “If you’re watching this, it means I finally found the courage.”
My world tilted.
She explained everything in a rush. The crash hadn’t been an accident. She had been in the passenger seat. The driver—her older cousin—had been involved with dangerous people. When the car went off the road, he died. She survived.
But the people he owed money to thought she knew things.
The police had helped stage her death to protect her. Witness protection. A new identity. No contact. Not even with me.
“I wanted to tell you so many times,” she said, tears in her eyes. “But it would’ve put you in danger.”
I sobbed through the rest of the video.
“The case is closed now,” she continued. “It’s safe. If you still want me in your life… I’m coming home next week.”
The video ended with a shaky smile.
I didn’t sleep.
A week later, I stood at the arrivals gate at the airport, feeling like I was about to faint.
Then I saw her.
Older. Thinner. But unmistakably Ava.
For a split second, we just stared at each other.
Then she dropped her bag, and we ran.
Seven years of grief collapsed into one breathless, tearful hug.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered into my shoulder.
“You’re here,” I said, laughing and crying at the same time. “That’s all that matters.”
I thought I had lost her forever.
But sometimes, life gives you something impossible.
Sometimes, the goodbye you mourned for years turns into a second chance.