My sister abandoned me after our mother died.
That was the story I had told myself for fifteen years, and by the time a lie survives that long, it begins to feel less like a story and more like bone.
Solid. Structural. Necessary.
So when St. Mary’s Hospital called me on a Tuesday afternoon and said Rachel Sullivan had died after giving birth to twin boys, I did not cry first.
I went cold.

I was standing in an empty three-bedroom colonial in Charlotte, preparing for a showing.
There was a bowl of fake lemons on the kitchen island, a beige couch no one had ever sat on, and a diffuser in the living room pumping out a scent called Coastal Linen that smelled nothing like a coast and nothing like linen.
I remember all of it because grief always arrives in places that feel offensively ordinary.
The nurse’s voice was gentle and practiced.