In the months following my son’s passing, life felt as though it had lost all familiar shape. The house seemed quieter than ever before, filled with small reminders of the joy that once lived within its walls—an unfinished drawing on the fridge, a tiny jacket still hanging by the door. Grief arrived in waves, sometimes soft and sometimes overwhelming, and it changed the way my husband and I understood each other. We tried to lean on one another, but our pain took different forms, and slowly our marriage began to feel like two parallel paths instead of one shared road. Friends reached out in the beginning with heartfelt messages and thoughtful gestures, but as time moved forward, those check-ins became less frequent. Only one person stayed consistent—my old college friend, Lila—who showed up quietly, offering calm companionship when the days felt hardest.
Lila had a way of sitting with me without needing explanations. She never pushed me to talk and never offered the kind of phrases people say when they don’t know what else to do. Instead, she brought a steady presence—cups of tea, peaceful walks, or simply shared silence. Her reassurance was gentle, expressed through a simple message: “Time heals. You’ll survive.” Then, without warning, she disappeared. Her messages stopped, her visits ended, and her absence grew into a new kind of worry. I tried to tell myself she must have needed space or become caught up in her own life, but something about the suddenness lingered in my thoughts. One morning, guided by a feeling I couldn’t fully explain, I found her old address and decided to visit, unsure of what I would discover or whether she would welcome me.
