The Funeral They Skipped Came Back In One Headline Six Months Later-heuh

The night my father pounded on my front door, I was standing in the kitchen with both hands around a mug I had not drunk from.

The tea had gone cold.

The house was quiet in the way a grieving house gets quiet, not peaceful, not calm, just emptied of the sounds that used to make it alive.

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There were no dinosaur feet running down the hallway.

There was no seven-year-old voice asking where her purple backpack went.

There was no Ethan opening the garage door too loudly and apologizing before I could complain.

There was only my phone vibrating on the counter and my father’s fist hitting my front door.

Six months earlier, I learned a person can lose a whole world before lunch.

Ethan had left that morning with Lily and Noah in our family SUV, planning to stop for muffins before drop-off.

Lily was seven and had recently decided she wanted to be a veterinarian, a gymnast, and a judge.

Noah was four and still said spaghetti like it had too many letters to survive.

Ethan kissed my forehead before he left and told me to enjoy the quiet morning because by dinner the house would sound like a zoo again.

That was the last ordinary sentence my husband ever gave me.

The call came not long after.

There had been a crash on I-95 outside Richmond, Virginia.

A truck driver had fallen asleep, crossed the median, and struck their SUV before Ethan could get out of the way.

People say “impact” like it is a clean word.

There was nothing clean about what happened to my family.

By the time I reached the hospital, the world had already started speaking to me in forms.

Hospital intake.

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