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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Gifts

Every year, five gifts arrived for my birthday.

Always on time.

Always carefully packed.

Always from people I had never met.

There was no sender's address.

No message inside.

Only one name written on every parcel, in neat handwriting.

Han.

I never questioned it when I was younger.

Gifts were gifts. Love was love.

But this year felt different.

I was turning eighteen.

That morning, I got ready for college faster than usual. My bag was packed, my hair still slightly damp. I checked the time twice before stepping out.

"Papa," I said, walking toward him, "we have only fifteen minutes left. Let's go."

He looked at me calmly, as if time didn't matter.

"Sit," he said. "Eat first."

"We'll be late," I insisted.

"No tension," he replied. "I'll drop you on time."

I didn't argue after that. I never did.

We rode through the familiar roads in silence. The wind brushed against my face, but my mind was heavy. The same thought I had buried for years surfaced again.

"Papa…" I said softly.

He didn't answer, but he didn't stop the bike either.

"My birthday is coming," I continued. "You always say it's a surprise."

Still no reply.

I hesitated, then spoke the question that had lived inside me longer than I could remember.

"Every year, I receive five gifts," I said. "From unknown people."

His hands tightened slightly on the handle.

"I only know one name on the parcels," I added. "Han."

The bike slowed.

"Who are they, Papa?" I asked. "How do they know what I like?"

Silence.

"Why do they send me gifts every year?"

The bike stopped.

"Stop talking," he said suddenly.

His voice wasn't angry.

It was scared.

I froze.

It was the first time I felt afraid of my father.

I turned to look at him. His face wasn't tired. It wasn't strict. It was disturbed — like someone trying to hold a wall that was about to break.

"Don't talk about these things again," he said quickly. "And never say that name."

The college gate came into view.

"Okay," I whispered.

"Study well," he added, avoiding my eyes. "Go home by yourself in the evening. I won't come."

Before I could ask anything more, he left.

I stood there, watching him disappear into the traffic.

My chest felt tight.

Why did my questions scare him?

Who were those people?

And why did a name I had never known feel like it already belonged to my life?

I picked up my bag and walked toward the gate.

For the first time, my simple life didn't feel simple anymore.

End of Chapter 1

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