My mother kept a drawer she never let anyone open.A week after we buried her, I opened it.My name is Meredith Harlow, and my family cleans around its grief.By the time I got to the house, my father had already boxed her afghan, her magazines, the little cloisonne box where she kept her change.Even the photo from their thirtieth anniversary was gone, just a darker rectangle on the wallpaper where it used to hang.My sister Grace met me in the doorway wearing our grandmother's silver bracelet like a badge."You're late," she said, and handed me packing tape and garbage bags.Everything had to be out by noon.Arthur, the family lawyer, was coming at one to put a dollar value on the things my mother touched every day.My father wanted the estate settled before the primary.Mom had been dead a week, and he was worried about his poll numbers.But the study door was closed.In a house where my father left every door open, that meant something.Inside, the room had been scrubbed hollow.And in the desk she loved best, behind a false bottom, I found them.Letters.Addressed. Stamped. Never mailed.A name she whispered at night.A brother I never met.An address my father kept and never explained.Every letter pulls a thread, and the whole careful story of my childhood starts to come apart.An embezzlement. A diagnosis no one would speak aloud. A confession waiting at a rehab center across the state."We discussed this, Meredith," Grace keeps saying, like repetition could make it true.But some things were never discussed.They were buried, in a drawer, by a woman who couldn't bring herself to send a single page.Now Meredith has to choose between the tidy family her father is so desperate to preserve and the true one her mother hid in her own handwriting.The Unsent Drawer is a luminous, quietly devastating literary family novel about grief, inheritance, long-kept secrets, sisters, an unsent letter, and the late reckoning that finally tells the truth.Perfect for readers who love family secrets, multigenerational drama, quiet literary fiction, complicated sisters, and emotional stories about the things we never say out loud.