Losing Conan had hollowed me out, leaving me wandering through rooms full of memories that felt more like tombstones than reminders. I stopped cooking because the kitchen was where he had been happiest, and his absence made each meal taste like ash. I stopped answering the phone because hearing another voice, even a familiar one, only reminded me how quiet the rest of my life had become. And yet, through that emptiness, Charles — Conan’s best friend since childhood — became a presence so steady that I couldn’t imagine the days without him. He didn’t speak over my sorrow; he didn’t offer empty platitudes. He simply came, day after day, bringing groceries, helping with chores, keeping silent vigil beside me when the grief felt like a physical weight pressing down on my chest.
He didn’t try to replace Conan, and that, perhaps, was why his companionship slowly became something more than friendship. Months passed, and slowly, in the quiet spaces between grief and routine, laughter returned. Not always, not often, but enough to remind me that life, even after loss, could still feel like life.