My husband passed away in a car c.r.a.s.h on a stormy night, leaving me to raise our ailing son alone. Weeks later, I received a single text from his number — just one word, “Hi.” That message shattered everything I thought I knew about grief, truth, and the man I once loved. Life had already cornered me long before the text arrived.
My son, Oliver, was five when the doctor uttered those awful words — “It’s rare, but treatable. Expensive, though.”
I remember sitting there in the sterile white room, the smell of antiseptic clinging to everything, gripping his tiny hand while forcing a smile I didn’t feel. He swung his legs from the exam table, blissfully unaware of the storm that had just settled over our lives.
After that day, everything became about bills, medicine, and hours — always more hours. I worked mornings at a diner and nights cleaning offices. Some days, I was so exhausted I forgot whether I’d eaten.
But I kept going. Because mothers don’t get to fall apart. Evan, my husband, was doing his part too.
Maybe more. He took every construction job he could find — some three towns over, sometimes farther. He’d leave before sunrise and return long after dark, worn out, his clothes smelling of rain and cement dust.
I missed him terribly, but I understood. We were clawing our way through survival. And then, one night, he didn’t come home.
They told me it was a rainy highway, slick with oil. His truck had spun out, flipped twice. They said he d.i.3.d instantly — as if that were supposed to comfort me.
It didn’t. I still remember the officer’s voice — soft but distant — as if he were reading from a script. After that, I remember nothing.
Just flashes of sound: my mother’s cry, Oliver asking where his daddy was, the world collapsing inward. Oliver didn’t understand. Every morning he’d ask, “When’s Daddy coming home?” and I’d tell him, gently, “He’s not, sweetheart.”
But he’d only smile, convinced I was wrong.
He’d sit by the window at night, waiting for headlights that never came. Days became weeks. Then months.
I moved through life like a shadow — working, paying bills, crying in the shower so Oliver wouldn’t hear. And then one night, it happened. I came home after my second shift, shoes soaked from another rainstorm.
My back ached, and my body felt like lead. I tossed my bag on the couch, grabbed my phone, and saw a few missed notifications — a call from my mom, a text from my boss. And then… one message froze me.
It was from Evan. Just one word. “Hi.”
My phone slipped from my hand, clattering onto the floor.
For a long moment, I couldn’t breathe. My heart pounded so hard I thought I might pass out. When I finally dared to pick it up, my hands trembled.
I stared at the screen as if it might vanish. I typed back:
“I don’t know who you are or what kind of joke this is, but the man who owned this number is d.3.a.d.”
The reply came seconds later. “No.”
No?
I stared at the word. My throat went dry. I typed again, my pulse racing:
“This is cruel.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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