After my husband passed away, the house didn’t just feel empty—it felt haunted. For months, my life had been filled with noise and urgency: hospital monitors humming, medication alarms blaring, whispered prayers whispered into the dark when I thought no one could hear me. Then, almost cruelly, it all stopped. The silence that followed didn’t feel peaceful. It felt heavy, like it had weight, like it pressed into the walls and sat on my chest. Every room held echoes of him—his slippers by the couch, his mug in the cupboard, the dent in the pillow beside mine.
Grief moved in fast, filling every corner before I even understood what was happening. And right behind it came reality, sharp and relentless. Bills stacked up on the counter. The mortgage became a threat instead of a monthly routine. And before I could even catch my breath, it was just me and my nineteen-year-old stepson, Leo, standing in the middle of a future neither of us had planned for, trying to figure out how to keep the same roof over our heads without the man who used to hold everything together.