They Skipped My Family’s Funeral, Then Saw My Name In The News-hihehu

My parents missed the funeral of my husband and two children because it was my sister’s birthday.

When I begged them to come, my father calmly said, “Today is your sister’s birthday. We can’t come.”

Six months later, one headline about me sent my entire family into panic when they learned I had removed them from every part of my life they thought still belonged to them.

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I called my parents from the hospital chapel because I could not bring myself to make the call from the waiting room.

The waiting room had too many people in it.

Too many vending machines humming.

Too many paper coffee cups in too many hands.

Too many strangers looking up every time a doctor opened a door.

The chapel was small and plain, with a wooden cross on the wall and a stack of tissues in a basket by the door.

There was a faint smell of floor cleaner, old carpet, and rainwater from people’s coats.

My hands still had ash on them from the accident scene.

I had scrubbed them twice in the hospital bathroom, but it stayed under my fingernails and along the creases of my palms like proof.

My husband, Ethan Miller, and our children, Lily and Noah, had died that morning on Interstate 95 outside Richmond, Virginia.

Ethan was thirty-four.

Lily was seven.

Noah was four.

A truck driver had fallen asleep, crossed the median, and hit their SUV so hard the state trooper could not finish explaining it without looking away.

I was not in the car.

I survived because I had stayed home to finish a work report and planned to meet them later.

That was the fact everyone kept saying gently, as if it might be some kind of mercy.

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