The final reel was simply labeled "Q" .

It was only five seconds long. My mother, looking directly into the lens. No smile. No lover beside her. She held up a handwritten sign that read: "MAY I FINALLY CHOOSE MYSELF?"

There was my mother, younger than I ever knew her, laughing on a beach. The man holding her hand was named KAMAL. He had kind eyes and a terrible mustache. In the next scene, he was fixing a car engine, grease smeared on his cheek. Then, a birthday cake. Then, an argument—silent on the film, but violent in the way she turned her back to the camera. The reel ended with Kamal walking out a door, carrying a single suitcase.

I found the film reel in the attic, labeled in her sharp handwriting: "MTRJM KAML – MAY 1999." The metal can was rusted, the film inside brittle as dead leaves. I was supposed to be cleaning out the house after her funeral. Instead, I became a detective of her past.

The projector whirred to life. Grainy, sun-bleached footage flickered on the wall.

My mother, Syma Q, had a rule: never meet a boyfriend until the third month. "By then, the cologne wears off, and you see the real man," she'd say, stirring her tea. But she forgot to apply that rule to her home movies.

The film burned. A tiny, sputtering flame at the sprocket hole, and then the image melted into a black star.

I rewound the charred remains. The last frame, before the burn, wasn't a door closing. It was a window, opening.

The Reel of My Mother's Suitors

Reel after reel. "MTRJM KAML" appeared again—a different Kamal? A second chance? The footage was choppy, almost frantic. A wedding? No, a funeral. Whose? The camera dropped, showing only the wet pavement and her shadow, alone.

And for the first time, I saw the sky.

I sat in the dark for a long time. I had always known my mother as a fortress. But these men—Kamal, Syma, the mysterious Q—they weren't the story. She was. The reel wasn't about the boyfriends. It was about her learning to walk away.

I threaded the next reel: "SYMA – 2001."