I buried one of my twin daughters three years ago and spent every single day wrapping myself around that deep and truly devastating loss. So when her sister’s teacher casually said, “Both of your girls are doing great” on the very first day of first grade, I literally stopped breathing.
I remember the fever more than anything else. Ava had been cranky for two days.
On the third morning, her temperature hit 104, and she went limp in my arms.I knew with the bone-deep certainty that only mothers understand that this was something else entirely.The hospital lights were too bright. The beeping was constant.
And the word “meningitis” arrived the way the worst words always do, quietly, almost carefully, like the doctor was trying to hand it to us gently.John held my hand so hard that my knuckles ached. Ava’s twin sister, Lily, sat in a waiting room chair with her shoes not quite reaching the floor, not fully understanding, and eating the crackers a nurse had given her.
And then, four days later, Ava was gone.
I don’t remember much after that.
I remember IV fluids and a ceiling I stared at for what felt like weeks.
I remember Debbie, John’s mother, whispering to someone in the hallway. I remember signing papers that were put in front of me.
I don’t know what they said.I remember John’s face, hollowed out in a way I’d never seen before and haven’t seen since.
I never saw the casket lowered.
I never held my daughter one last time after the machines went quiet. There is a wall in my memory where those days should be, and behind it, nothing.
Lily needed me to keep breathing, so I did.
Three years is a long time to keep breathing through.
I went back to work. I got Lily to preschool, gymnastics, and birthday parties.
I cooked dinner, folded laundry, and smiled at the right moments.
From the outside, I probably looked fine.
From the inside, it was like walking through every single day with a stone in my chest. I just got better at carrying it.
One morning, I sat at the kitchen table and told John I needed us to move. He didn’t argue.
He already knew.
We sold the house, packed everything, and drove a thousand miles to a city where no one knew us.
We bought a small house with a yellow door, and for a while, the newness of it helped.
Lily was about to start first grade. She stood at the front door that morning in new sneakers, backpack straps tightened all the way, practically levitating with excitement.