Leo ran his finger down the January grid. “January 1—Thursday,” he muttered. Then he froze. There, under March, was a date he’d circled in his mind for a decade: March 8. His late wife’s birthday. In 1987, it fell on a Sunday. “She would have liked that,” he whispered. “Church in the morning, then pancakes.”
On December 15, 1987, a young woman walked into a hardware store in Bozeman, Montana. Her name was Maya. She was twenty-three, a photographer’s assistant, homesick for a place she’d never been. She glanced at the calendar on the counter, flipped to December, and gasped. The woman in the photo—the laughing woman with messy hair—was the exact image she’d been dreaming about for months, the face she’d been trying to capture in her own work: joy, unposed, real. 1987 calendar
They framed the letter. And on the last day of 1987, Leo added one final star to his proof calendar: December 31. Not a memory. A beginning. The 1987 calendar is long out of print. But somewhere in a basement in Chicago, or a scrapbook in Bozeman, or a son’s memory, the story of that year still turns—one page, one star, one quiet act of love at a time. Leo ran his finger down the January grid