He Set the Table for Two Every Night… Even After She Was Gone
The newspapers were the first clue that something wasn’t right. They piled up on Mr. Halvorsen’s porch for days, untouched. He was a quiet man who followed the same routine every day, so when nobody saw him, concern slowly turned into worry.
After a week, the landlord and I decided to check on him. When the apartment door opened, an eerie silence filled the room. We found Mr. Halvorsen sitting peacefully at his kitchen table, as though he had simply drifted away in the middle of an ordinary evening. But what caught my attention wasn’t him—it was the table itself.
There were two place settings arranged with care. Two plates. Two glasses. Two folded napkins. Yet only one chair was occupied. The chair across from him sat slightly pulled back, as if someone had just stepped away. The landlord quietly explained that his wife had passed away more than twenty years earlier. Beside the empty plate rested a worn notebook. Inside were pages of conversations. Every night, he had written to her, and in a softer handwriting, he had imagined her replies. Memories, jokes, apologies, and words of love filled page after page.
The final entry stopped me cold. He had written, “You were quiet tonight.” Beneath it, in gentle script, was the reply: “That’s okay. So was I.” As I closed the notebook, I realized something heartbreaking and beautiful. For twenty years, he had kept their love alive. And even in his final moments, he wasn’t dining alone—he was still sharing dinner with the woman he never stopped loving.