The jacket was black leather and short, double breasted, and had about four buttons going down the front just like mine. I put it on and departed for Cleveland, Ohio from Los Angeles. I had wanted to visit California with my fiance for my Spring Break. Coincidentally, there in LA was a woman with whom he was not too close to, his aunt. She had a nice roomy house and she and her husband had a daughter my age. We would stay in her house there together and I would actually have my very own room, the room that belonged to her daughter. Since her daughter was a little bit older, maybe a couple years at most, than I, she was no longer at home but lived independently. I was nervous: I had never met his aunt, and i wanted to look good for her. I wore my leather jacket my sister had bought for me because I felt it made me look sophisticated. The jacket was a small, and fit perfect, but as I looked later at my jacket once the trip was over, it felt a little loose. I had not lost weight. So, i put it back in my closet to examine another day. There is something worthy of note that I discovered during this trip. There were numbers tattooed on my future aunt's arm. I thought how strange and decided not to ask why. I had a bad feeling that she had experienced the horrors of the Holocaust. I knew for certain that she was my future husband's father's sister, and therefore I assumed she had grown up with her brother. I did not know whether he was older or younger than my future aunt, though. You will note I am not using anybody's proper name. That is because much if not most of this story is true, and I would like to protect my people's privacy, if possible. Getting back to the jacket, my piece de resistance, so to speak: I loved it, but I was sure the jacket in the closet was not mine, not the one I took to LA. It was too big. Then I recalled that there was one leather jacket, a skirt, and another leather jacket on the other side of the cute little grey skirt in the closet in LA. Then I realized I must have grabbed the cousin's jacket instead of mine. I decided to wait. I did not want to disturb anyone or be accused of anything, so I turned a blind eye. I remember arguing with my fiance. I was sure his aunt was a Holocaust survivor. I was sure also that I had accidentally taken his cousin's jacket. Then, I said it. I asked him, out loud, whether he knew his aunt had been a survivor. That is what caused us to fight. He had not known. I was nosey. I was not even Jewish, so how would I know? I was a "goy." Hurt and upset, I asked my fiance's father where he was born. I got my answer: he was born in Europe and yes he and his sister survived the Holocaust. There in Hungary, she had been tattoed. I felt like a piece of excrement. I had gotten the information I sought, but at what cost? Bringing up all of that pain, just because I wanted to be right, was actually all wrong. I thought I was going to provide closure or something. Really though, it was only closure for me. For my fiance's family, the discovery opened up old wounds. Questions arose: Why does she need to know? How did she know and not I? I am her nephew, I am his son, and he never thought to tell me. I am not a child. I am a grown man, about to marry someone whom I love, and this is the message I am sent: I know nothing. I thought I knew my father, but maybe I don't. He ignored me, neglected me. What am I to do with this knowledge now? I wish she wouldn't have been so nosey. It is none of her business. She is not blood-related. These thoughts all were part of my fiance's argument. I felt awful. The argument, the tattoo, and the confusion were all on me. Now I had stolen a jacket, even though it was simply a mistake in my mind, the family just saw it as another smudge on my character. It was one of my many flaws. How we got through this great pain I will never understand, but we did. Anyway, back to the real interesting part. I told him about the jacket and he said for me to keep it and not to ask for my own jacket back. I would grow into it, he said. Yes, I would grow, mature, and one day bloom into the real woman who would wear the jacket with pride. I never met his cousin, but I still have her leather jacket if she wants it back. I kept it, and now twenty years later, it hangs in my own closet, in my house. I suppose it is mine now. I suppose it is just part of the story. It will remain a physical reminder of a stranger whom I never met, yet now feel I know so well. I wear it and think of her, in LA, in New York City, and wonder does she still have a leather jacket, size small? Does it fit her just right? Does she imagine me as I imagine her? Does she ever wonder about me? I really love her, though I do not know her name. I love her story because now it is my story also. We are like sisters from the other side. I pray maybe for forgiveness and also maybe for our friendship to blossom one day. When we do meet again, I will bring her a gift: the same leather jacket. It doesn't really mean a thing. It is only a jacket, until you know the story behind it, right?
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2 comments
This story felt incredibly personal and intimate, touching on themes of cultural sensitivity, guilt, and emotional discovery. The leather jacket becomes a powerful symbol—what starts as a simple mix-up evolves into a representation of connection, misunderstanding, and growth. The narrator’s curiosity about her future family’s past opens old wounds, leading to conflict and reflection. The blend of small, everyday details with significant historical weight creates an impactful contrast. It left me feeling reflective about the ways we so...
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I wish I had actually written it better because I didn't use the correct paragraphing. However, I am happy that you saw value in it. It is reassuring.
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