I was sitting on my late son’s bed with his blue camp shirt pressed to my face when the phone rang.
It still smelled faintly like him.
That was what grief had turned me into—a mother sitting in a room full of sneakers, schoolbooks, baseball cards, and silence, trying to breathe in whatever was left of her child.
Owen had been gone for weeks, but his room still looked like he might come back any second. His hoodie was thrown over the chair. His math notebook sat open on the desk. One of his wooden shop-class projects hung crookedly near the window.
Some mornings, I still saw him in the kitchen, flipping pancakes too high and laughing when they landed half on the stove. That was the last morning I saw him alive.
He had been fighting cancer for two years, but we believed he was going to beat it. We had built our whole future around that belief.
Then the lake took him.
He had gone with my husband, Charlie, and a few friends to the lake house. A storm rolled in too fast. The current pulled him under. Search teams looked for days and found nothing.
No body.
No goodbye.
Just the cruel kind of grief that never feels finished.
The phone kept ringing until I finally looked at the screen.
Mrs. Dilmore.
Owen’s math teacher.
“Hello?” I answered, my voice barely there.
“Meryl,” she said, sounding shaken, “I’m so sorry to call like this, but I found something in my desk drawer today. I think you need to come to the school.”
My grip tightened around Owen’s shirt. “What is it?”
“It’s an envelope,” she said. “It has your name on it. It’s from Owen.”
The room seemed to tilt.
“From Owen?”
“Yes. It’s in his handwriting.”
I don’t remember hanging up. I only remember standing too fast, my heart pounding in my throat.
My mother found me in the kitchen.
“What’s wrong?”
“His teacher found something,” I whispered. “Owen left me something.”
Her face changed at once. Only another mother could understand that kind of hope and terror arriving in the same breath.