On her way to bury her son, Margaret hears a voice from the past over the airplane’s speakers. What begins as a journey of grief takes an unexpected turn, reminding her that even in loss, life can return with purpose.
My name is Margaret, and I am 63 years old. Last month, I took a flight to Montana to bury my son.
Robert had his hand resting on his knee, moving his fingers as if he were trying to smooth out something that wouldn’t lie flat. He had always been the fixer—the one with duct tape and a plan.But today, he hadn’t said my name even once.
That morning, in that narrow row of seats, he felt like someone I used to know. We had both lost the same person, yet our grief moved in separate, silent currents, never quite touching.
“Would you like some water?” he asked gently, as if the question itself might keep me from falling apart.
I shook my head. My throat was too dry for anything kind.
The plane began to move, and I closed my eyes, pressing my fingers into my lap to keep myself steady. The roar of the engines rose around us, and with it, the pressure building inside my chest.
For days, I had woken with my son’s name lodged in my throat. But this moment—pressurized air, seatbelts clicking, my breath refusing to come—felt like the exact instant when grief stopped pretending.And somehow, I believed I was meant to be here all along.
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