I don’t really remember the crash. Not clearly. What sticks with me is the rain—first a faint whisper, then loud enough to drown out the music in the car. I remember Mom laughing. I remember her teasing me about Nate from chemistry class. I remember the sudden flash of headlights coming straight at us. And then? Screaming her name from somewhere outside the car, knees sunk in wet mud, hands covered in her blood. She was lying in the road, twisted, still, her eyes staring past me into nothingness. I shook her. I begged her. Then came sirens, voices, and hands dragging me away.
One voice said she was driving. I tried to speak. To tell them the truth. But my mouth couldn’t form words, and the world tilted into darkness.
I woke up in a hospital, overwhelmed with pain and confusion. My father—Thomas—was there, a stranger who used to send birthday texts and show up every other Christmas. He put his hand over mine and said, “Hey, kid.” And just like that, I knew. She was gone.
Two weeks later, I was in a house that didn’t feel like home. Julia—his wife—was trying hard. She made oatmeal with flaxseeds and smiled too much. I wanted greasy waffles at midnight with Mom, not protein balls and forced cheer. There was a baby here too, Duncan. My half-brother. I refused to even say his name aloud. I didn’t belong in this life they had built without me.
When the court date came, I wore the same blouse I had worn to Mom’s funeral. I sat in that cold courtroom and stared at the man who killed her—Calloway. Drunk. Reckless. Unforgivable. When they asked what happened, I said, “He hit us.” But then his lawyer stood up and asked who was driving. My breath caught. My mouth froze.
It had always been blurry. But suddenly, everything came into focus. The weight of the steering wheel in my hands. The feel of her giving me the keys because I asked for a ride. “You dragged me out here, Mae. You’re driving,” her words were clear now. And then the rain. And the headlights. It was me. I was driving.
I told my father that night. I whispered it through sobs. “I didn’t see him until it was too late.” He didn’t yell. He just held me like it was the first time in years. “It wasn’t your fault,” he said. But guilt is a stubborn thing.
Later, I overheard him telling Julia the truth. He sounded broken. “She’s a stranger to me,” he said. “I wasn’t there.” I pressed my forehead to the wall, biting back tears. Love doesn’t undo distance. It doesn’t fill the gap left by lost time.
In Mom’s old trunk, I found a letter she had written to my dad a year before she died. She had asked him in writing if he was finally ready to be a real father. “Maybe, if you try, she’ll let you in.” Her words weren’t full of certainty. She had doubts too. Somehow, that gave me permission to have mine.
The verdict came: Calloway took a plea. Less time. Full admission. It didn’t feel like justice, but at least it was the truth. That night, I whispered to Mom’s picture, “I’m sorry. I love you.” And for the first time, I felt like maybe she heard me.
The next morning, there were waffles on the table. Real ones. Butter. Syrup. Julia just shrugged. “Don’t tell the other vegans,” she said, sipping her tea. And I smiled. A real smile.
That weekend, I told Dad I wanted to start over. I wanted to get to know my brother. I wanted to paint his nursery. I wanted to try Julia’s weird food. I wanted to try being part of something again.
Dad pulled me into a hug. For the first time, I let him. Maybe this life—this messy, unfinished, imperfect life—could be home. Maybe healing doesn’t come all at once. Maybe it arrives in moments. A letter. A hug. A plate of waffles. A mural painted for someone too young to understand, but one day, maybe he will.