They say time heals, but some truths don’t fade—they wait. Twenty years after a snowstorm stole my family, the truth finally found its way back to me through the hands of my granddaughter.I’m seventy years old now. I’ve buried two wives and outlived most of the people I once called friends. You’d think that after all that loss, nothing could still knock the breath out of me. I believed that too. I thought grief had finished its work on me long ago.
I was wrong.
It started with snow—the kind that feels personal, as if the sky itself is angry. It was just a few days before Christmas, twenty years back. My son Michael, his wife Rachel, and their two children had come over for an early holiday dinner. We lived in a small town where everyone waved whether they liked you or not, and winter storms were as common as coffee in the morning.The forecast promised light flurries. Maybe an inch or two.
It lied.
They left around seven that evening. I remember Michael standing in the doorway with his youngest, Emily, half-asleep in her puffy jacket. He smiled the way sons do when they think they’ve got everything under control.
“We’ll be fine, Dad,” he said. “Just want to get the kids home early.”