The paramedics had taken him to the local county hospital, but none of my family had shown up to see him. Not my mother, not my father, and certainly not my brother Troy.

I took emergency leave that same night and drove straight through the darkness. By the time I walked into his room, he was already fading away.

The room smelled like heavy disinfectant and stale coffee, making everything feel cold. He looked smaller than I had ever seen him, but when he opened his eyes and saw me standing there, he smiled.

“I guess you’re the one who remembered me,” he whispered in a raspy voice. I tried to comfort him by saying that Mom and Dad would be there soon.

Abraham gave the smallest shake of his head, looking tired rather than bitter. “They won’t come,” he said gently, and he was right.

He died two days later without any drama or grand speeches. When I called my mother to break the news, she just sighed over the phone.

“At least he isn’t suffering anymore,” Janet said, and that was the end of the conversation. No one offered to help with the funeral or even asked where he would be buried.