đ Mailbox to the Moon
The smallest messages travel the farthest.

It all started with a blue mailbox that wasnât supposed to be there.
It stood crookedly at the end of the cul-de-sac, right where the neighborhood path curved into the woods. No street number, no postal mark, no nameâjust a faded moon sticker peeling from the side like a forgotten dream.
Leo noticed it the day after his dad left for the moon.
Well, not really the moon. Thatâs just what his mom had told him when Leo asked why Dad had packed up and left in the middle of the night with only a hug and a box of books. âHeâs gone on a long mission,â sheâd whispered. âTo the moon, maybe. Somewhere far, for now.â
Leo knew it was a lie, or at least not the kind adults admitted was a kind lie. But he liked it better than the truth he didnât understand. The moon. He could live with that.
So he wrote him a letter.
He didnât say muchâjust that school was boring, Mom still cried in the laundry room, and he missed the way Dad made grilled cheese with cinnamon. He folded the note neatly, stuck it in a plain envelope, and walked it down the street to the blue mailbox with the moon sticker.
He slid it in, half-smiling. âFly safe, Dad.â
The next day, there was a letter waiting inside.
It was typed on old paper, like from a typewriter, and smelled faintly of vanilla and metal. The return address simply read:
âLunar Listening Station No. 9â
Leo tore it open.
Dear Leo,
Space is lonely, but your message made it warmer than a cup of cocoa on Neptune. Tell your mom sheâs braver than most astronauts. And keep practicing pianoâI could hear you from up here.
Grilled cheese with cinnamon? Thatâs a moon favorite.
With gravity-defying love,
Commander Dad đ§âđđ
Leo read it three times before running home with a grin as wide as Saturnâs rings.
He wrote again the next day. And the day after that.
The mailbox became a ritual. A sacred stop between school and sunset. Sometimes he wrote jokes, sometimes questions about space, sometimes he just vented about the math teacher who always looked like she hated Tuesdays. And alwaysâevery single timeâthere was a letter back.
From âCommander Dad.â
He started to smile again. His mom noticed. She even began humming while she cooked. Leo read some of the letters to her. Others, he kept close to his chest like they were made of moonlight.
Then one rainy afternoon, it happened.
He saw a girl standing at the mailbox. She held a letter in both hands like it might explode or vanish. Her name was Mia, she said. Her mom was âon a tripâ and might not come back for a while. Her eyes were a storm.
Leo told her the secret. About the moon letters.
The next week, the blue mailbox got two letters a day.
Over the next month, it became three. Then five. Then more.
Kids started whispering about it at school. Some said it was magic. Some thought it was a prank. But one by one, they came.
To write.
To believe.
The letters kept coming back. Always typed. Always gentle. Always kind.
One said:
âYour dog still loves you, even if she canât write back herself. But I asked the stars, and they barked her hello.â
Another:
âYou are not too weird. You are not too broken. You are just not finished yet.â
And another:
âSometimes we lose people, but not all goodbyes are forever. Keep your heart open.â
On a quiet spring morning, the mailbox was gone.
No sticker. No letters. Just a smooth circle of grass where it had stood.
Leo didnât cry. Not this time.
Instead, he left a small rock on the spot. Painted with stars. Written in white:
âThank you for listening.â
⨠The Lesson:
Even when people are far awayâor goneâwe can still speak, still remember, and still be heard. Sometimes, the simplest acts of hope can reach farther than we ever imagined.
A Story by: Pir Ashfaq Ahmad
About the Creator
Pir Ashfaq Ahmad
The Falcon Rider



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