When I was ten, my dad died suddenly. The last thing he gave me was a singing teddy bear — one that played a soft tune when you pressed its paw. I clutched it through his funeral, the melody looping like a heartbeat I couldn’t let go of. Over time, the bear became more than a toy — it was a piece of him. Two decades later, when my son turned seven, I decided to pass it down — a bridge between the grandfather he’d never meet and the boy who carried his smile.
But when we pressed its paw, nothing happened. The batteries were dead. As I went to replace them, I noticed something odd — a small cassette hidden beside the battery box, wrapped in yellowed tape. I found an old recorder in the attic and pressed play. Then I heard his voice. My dad’s — warm, steady, unmistakable.
“Hey, kiddo,” he said, before reading my favorite bedtime stories and telling childhood memories I’d long forgotten. Near the end, his tone softened. “If you’re hearing this, you’re probably grown now. Maybe you’ve got kids. I’m sorry I won’t get to meet them. But maybe this way, they’ll get to meet me.”
That night, I played it for my son. He listened quietly, then whispered, “Grandpa sounds nice.” Now, that cassette is our most precious heirloom — a hidden time capsule of love that waited decades inside a teddy bear, carrying a father’s voice across time to reach his grandson.