
The rain had turned the trenches into rivers of mud, and Private Daniel Harris gripped his rifle tightly, his fingers numb from the cold. It was 1944, somewhere in France, and the world felt as though it had shrunk to mud, fear, and the sound of distant artillery. Between the bursts of chaos, there were moments of stillness, moments when he almost let himself remember home.
In his breast pocket, wrapped carefully in wax paper, was a letter from his younger sister. The paper was worn at the folds, smudged from being read again and again. “When you come home, Danny, we’ll plant the apple tree just like you said. I saved the seeds.” Her handwriting was uneven but full of hope. That letter kept him going more than rations or rest ever could.
One evening, after a long day of waiting for orders, Daniel pulled out the letter again. The men around him were quiet, each lost in their own thoughts. He read the words by the flicker of a candle, and for a moment, he wasn’t a soldier in a war. He was just a brother, a son, a young man who dreamed of planting trees and watching them grow.
When the war finally ended, Daniel carried that letter home with him, creased and fragile. His sister met him at the train station, her eyes wide with relief. Together, they planted the apple tree in their backyard. For years to come, every blossom that bloomed reminded Daniel not only of survival, but of the simple promise that had carried him through the darkest of days.
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