Grandma made me promise something strange before she passed. One year after her death, she wanted me to dig up her favorite rosebush. When I finally did, standing there with dirt on my hands, I whispered, “Grandma knew.”

When my father passed away, the silence that followed was heavier than anything I had ever known.

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It was not just the quiet of an empty house or the absence of his footsteps in the hallway. It was the kind of stillness that seeps into your chest and settles there, making every breath feel unfamiliar. He had been my anchor, the one constant in my life, and without him, the world felt unsteady.

My dad was the kind of man who believed in small rituals. Saturday mornings meant pancakes stacked too high and drenched in syrup. School mornings came with encouraging words that sounded simple but always landed exactly where I needed them. Before every test, every audition, every big moment, he would look me straight in the eye and remind me that I was capable of more than I realized.

When my mother died years earlier, he became everything at once. Parent, cheerleader, safety net. For nearly a decade, it was just the two of us learning how to move forward together. Eventually, he remarried. That was when Carla entered our lives.

From the start, Carla felt cold in a way that was hard to explain. She smiled often, but it never reached her eyes. Everything about her was sharp and polished, from her perfectly styled hair to the pointed tips of her manicured nails. She spoke kindly in public and dismissively in private. I learned early on to stay out of her way.

Still, my dad loved her, or at least believed he did. And because he was happy, I tried to be patient.

Then one spring morning, without warning, he was gone.

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