They said my husband’s death was an accident, the kind that happens quietly and leaves no room for questions. A slip on the stairs, a sudden fall, a broken skull, instant death. Those were the words repeated to me by doctors, police officers, neighbors—by everyone who needed the story to be simple so they could move on.
The day it happened, the rain fell with an anger that felt deliberate, pounding the roof until the world sounded hollow. The power went out just before dusk, and the house sank into shadows. My husband, Huy, had returned from the warehouse earlier than usual, soaked from the storm, complaining lightly about the slick steps near the door. I remember turning my head for only a moment to grab a towel. I remember the sound—a heavy, final thud that did not belong in a living house. When I reached him, he was already gone, his body twisted unnaturally at the base of the stairs, eyes open but empty. A neighbor rushed in after hearing the noise, and an ambulance arrived too late to matter.
The doctor spoke gently, clinically, telling me there was nothing that could have been done, that the impact had been fatal. The police took notes, glanced at the stairs, and closed their notebooks with efficient finality. No investigation. No follow-up. Just condolences and paperwork. I buried him under a gray sky that felt too large, too indifferent. Life, for everyone else, resumed. For me, it stopped. I moved through the days like a shadow, doing what was required, answering questions with practiced emptiness. The only thing I carried with me, from that house to the smaller apartment I later rented, was a small pot of purple orchids.