For sixty-three years, my husband never forgot Valentine’s Day.
Not once.
Every February 14th, without fail, Robert brought me flowers.
It didn’t matter what life looked like at the time.
The early years when everything felt new.
The harder years when we struggled.
Or the quiet, ordinary days in between.
There were always flowers.
It became something steady.
Something certain.
So when he passed away four months ago, I prepared myself for that first Valentine’s Day without him.
I expected silence.
An empty space where something familiar used to be.
But that morning… there was a knock at the door.
I opened it slowly.
And there, on the porch, was a bouquet of roses.
Wrapped the same way they always had been.
Just like when we were young.
My heart stopped.
Next to the flowers was an envelope.
My name written in his handwriting.
My hands trembled as I opened it.
Inside was a note.
And a key.
An address I didn’t recognize.
He told me to go there.
Nothing more.
No explanation.
Just trust.
My mind filled with questions as I made my way across town.
What could he have left behind?
What hadn’t he told me?
When I finally reached the apartment, I stood outside for a long moment before unlocking the door.
And when I stepped inside…
I froze.
It wasn’t just a room.
It was a music studio.
Beautiful.
Quiet.
At the center stood an upright piano.
Shelves lined the walls—filled with sheet music, recordings, and folders.
All labeled with my name.
My breath caught in my throat.
I walked slowly through the space, trying to understand what I was seeing.
Then I found his journal.
And everything became clear.
Years ago, I had once mentioned—almost casually—the dream I had given up.
Becoming a pianist.
I had said it like it didn’t matter anymore.
But to him… it did.
He never forgot.
In secret, he rented this studio.
He took piano lessons.
Practiced for years.
Alone.
Quietly.
All so that one day, he could give that dream back to me.
Knowing his time was running out, he planned everything.
The flowers.
The letter.
The key.
One last Valentine’s gift.
One final surprise.
And there, on the piano, was something else.
A piece of music.
Unfinished.
Titled For My Daisy.
I sat down slowly.
Placed my hands on the keys for the first time in decades.
And played.
The melody he had started.
The one he never got to finish.
With tears falling quietly, I added the notes he didn’t have time to write.
And in that moment…
It felt like he was still there.
Now, I visit that studio every week.
I play again.
Something I thought I had lost forever.
For sixty-three Valentine’s Days, my husband gave me flowers.
But in the end…
He gave me something far greater.
He gave me my dream back.