“Rose? Is this Owen’s mom?”
“Yes. Who is this?”
“This is Officer Bentley. I’m so sorry. There’s been an accident. Your son—”
The words blurred after that. A taxi. A drunk driver. “He didn’t suffer,” the officer said gently.
I don’t remember if I answered.
“He didn’t suffer.”
The days after dissolved into casseroles, soft condolences, and whispered prayers. Neighbors came and went. Mrs. Grant pressed a lasagna into my hands and told me I wasn’t alone.
At the cemetery, Pastor Reed offered to walk with me to the grave.
“I’m fine,” I insisted, though my knees nearly gave out.
I knelt and pressed my hand to the earth. “Owen, I’m still here, baby. Mom’s still here.”
Five years slipped by before I realized it. I stayed in the same house, buried myself in teaching, and smiled at crayon drawings that leaned crooked and bright.
“Ms. Rose, look at mine!”
“Beautiful, Caleb. Is that a dog or a dragon?”
“Both!”
That’s what kept me breathing.
It was another Monday when everything shifted. I parked in my usual spot and whispered, “Let today matter,” before walking into the noise of the morning bell.
At 8:05, the principal appeared at my door, serious.
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