“We’ll be fine, Dad,” he said. “I want to get the kids home before it gets too late.”
The wind howled when I closed the door behind them, and something in my gut twisted. I remember that part so clearly — as if some alarm in my bones went off too late.
“We’ll be fine, Dad.”
Three hours later, I heard a knock. The kind you never forget. It was sharp and urgent.
I opened the door to see Officer Reynolds, snow melting off his jacket, and sorrow already spread across his face as if he’d practiced it in the mirror.
There had been an accident.
The rural road Michael was driving on had iced over. Their car had gone off the shoulder and crashed into the trees.
My son was gone. Rachel and my oldest grandson, Sam — just eight years old — hadn’t made it either.
Only Emily survived.
She was five years old.
My son was gone.
I remember sitting in that ER hallway.
Emily had a concussion, broken ribs, and bruises from the seatbelt so deep they looked black under the fluorescent lights. She didn’t speak much.
The doctors said trauma had fogged her memory. Just “confusion” and “fragments.” Best not to force anything. Let it come back naturally — or not at all.
So I didn’t push.
I became her guardian overnight. I went from being a grieving father to a full-time stand-in parent at 50 with no warning.
She didn’t speak much.
The doctors called Emily’s survival a miracle. So did the police and the pastor at the funeral, standing in front of three closed caskets.
***
I learned how to cook meals I hadn’t made in 20 years.
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