I wouldn’t wish the pain of outliving your child on anyone sbl.
When Lily died at thirteen, it didn’t leave a gap in my life the way people sometimes describe grief — like a missing piece, something you carry the absence of. It split everything. Before her illness and after it. Before her and after her. Two completely different lives belonging to the same woman, and the second one didn’t feel worth inhabiting.
I kept her bedroom exactly as she had left it.
Her gray hoodie hung from the back of her desk chair, the sleeves pushed up to the elbows the way she always wore it. Her pink sneakers sat by the door with the toes pointed slightly inward, the way they always were when she kicked them off in a hurry. Every time I walked past that doorway, some irrational part of me expected to hear her voice — that opening note of whatever story she was about to tell me, the one that always started with Mom, don’t be mad, but—
She never came back.
The weeks after were a blur of days I couldn’t tell apart. I stopped answering my phone. I stopped checking the time. The world outside my apartment in Columbus continued at its usual speed, making its usual demands, completely indifferent to the fact that mine had stopped entirely.
Then, on a Tuesday morning six weeks after the funeral, my phone rang.

The Call From Lily’s Teacher — and the Envelope With Two Words on the Front
I stared at it through two full rings before I picked it up.
The number was the middle school. I felt something absurd and embarrassing move through me when I saw it — a flutter of something I refused to name, because naming it would have made it more real, and more real meant the fall afterward would be harder.
“Mrs. Carter?” The voice was soft, careful. “This is Ms. Holloway. Lily’s English teacher. I’m sorry to call like this. I wasn’t sure whether to, but — we need you to come to the school.”
“Is something wrong?”
A pause.