On the morning of Brian’s birthday, the world felt unfairly quiet, almost conspiring with the ache in Linda’s chest. The sky was a pale, unbroken blue, the air soft and gentle, as if nature itself was trying to lull the world into a peaceful rhythm. But for Linda and her daughters, Isla and Madison, the day carried a weight no gentle breeze could lift. Grief had settled into the tiniest corners of their lives, and over the past several months, it had become an uninvited tenant in every room of their home, leaving traces in the lingering silence, in the unwashed dishes left in the sink, in the way laughter had grown cautious and rare.
Isla, only six, missed the little mischief that made life sparkle. She missed the way her father’s eyes twinkled before sneaking cookies from the pantry, the wink that made every stolen bite feel like a secret shared between co-conspirators. Madison, older by two years and already brimming with emotional awareness beyond her years, missed the comforting resonance of his laughter—the kind that made the world feel safe, even when storms raged beyond the windows. Linda, too, missed everything. Every corner of their home whispered reminders: the scent of his favorite cologne lingering faintly in his old sweater, the chair he always sat in, the empty space at the head of the table. But it was the memory of his final days that haunted her most vividly. Stage four cancer had stolen him slowly, painfully, and then all at once. She had watched him fade, helpless, unable to ease his suffering, terrified by the inevitability of loss, and that image clung to her, heavy and inescapable, following her into each day.
