It started with an overgrown lot on Maple Street. The elderly owner, Mrs. Gable, had passed away, and the new owner—a quiet, pale man named Silas—hired Lexi to clear the invasive wisteria and tangled boxwoods. “Just dig deep,” he’d said, his eyes flickering toward the massive oak tree. “The roots run farther than you think.”

That spring, Lexi didn’t just landscape the property. She planted a garden of white lilacs—Clara’s favorite—and built a small bench beneath the oak. Silas, who turned out to be Clara’s nephew, paid her triple. But the real payment came on a quiet morning when Ezra, in his wheelchair, sat under those lilacs, holding a photograph of a girl with braids and a shy smile.

That evening, she dug carefully around the tree’s roots. Sure enough, a corroded tin box. Inside: not cash, but a stack of handwritten letters between Clara and a farmhand named Ezra. They had planned to run away together, but Papa had hidden the letters. Clara never knew Ezra waited for her at the train station three nights running.

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