Some words don’t arrive in time but they still change everything.

A letter can’t undo the past.
But it can rewrite the way we live with it.

A parable about absence, memory, and what remains unsaid.

The Letter is a quiet, unsettling parable about memory, absence, and the words we never send—or receive in time.
When a message arrives too late to change the past, it still has the power to transform the one who reads it.

Some words arrive exactly when they are needed.
Others arrive after everything has already changed.

The Letter is a reflective parable about loss, distance, and the fragile hope that meaning can still be found after connection is broken. When an unexpected letter surfaces, it forces its reader to confront not only what was written—but what was avoided, postponed, or left unsaid.

This is not a story about reconciliation guaranteed or wounds neatly healed.
It is about reckoning.
About how language lingers.
About how absence speaks as loudly as presence.

With restrained prose and emotional precision, Cory B. Scott explores the way letters—real or metaphorical—carry the weight of regret, love, and unfinished truth. The story asks a quiet but devastating question:

What do we owe each other when time is no longer generous?

The Letter is for readers drawn to intimacy, reflection, and the haunting realization that understanding sometimes arrives only after opportunity has passed.