Mariana died on a rainy Friday in March, on a slick curve of a highway in Texas. The rain hadn’t lasted long—just enough to make the road dangerous, just enough to change everything in an instant. Emily was seven, sitting in her classroom when the principal appeared at the door, her expression unusually serious.
Noah was only three, too young to understand why his grandmother, Evelyn, arrived at daycare with tear-filled eyes and rushed him out without even buttoning his coat properly.
What they both came to understand in the days that followed was painfully simple: their mother was gone.
What took longer to realize was that their father—the one person who should have held them together—would choose to walk away.
Michael stayed home for about three months after the accident. At first, he seemed shattered. He moved like a man carrying invisible weight, spoke rarely, and spent hours staring at Mariana’s photos as if he could step back into them. But slowly, things changed. He began coming home late. Then not at all. One night in June, Emily woke to the sound of suitcases rolling across the floor.
She got out of bed and saw him by the door.