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Inside was a folded letter and something else — a hospital bracelet from a visit I never knew about.
“Dad, Mom cries when she thinks I’m asleep. She thinks I don’t know I’m sick again. I heard the doctors last time. I know I might not get better. I told Mom if it gets really bad, she shouldn’t stay. She gets too sad and can’t breathe right. I don’t want her to see me like that. You’re stronger. You can handle it.”
I couldn’t breathe.
And he knew.
More than that — he had planned for it.
“I tried to stay,” she wrote. “He made me promise that if it was the end, I would remember him laughing — not like that in a hospital bed. He said you would be the brave one. I hated him for asking me. But I kept my word.”
She hadn’t walked away because she didn’t care.
Grief distorts everything. It narrows your vision until all you can see is pain. I had turned her into a villain because I needed somewhere to put my anger. It was easier than accepting that my son had faced his mortality with more clarity and compassion than either of us.
Daniel had tried to protect us — even at the end.
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