When my son casually mentioned his school’s Father’s Day event, I smiled through the ache—his dad’s been gone three years. But nothing prepared me for the teacher’s call the next day, thanking me for my husband’s “amazing presentation.” I froze. What was she talking about?
The sun had barely stretched over the golden fields, soft and sleepy, as I pulled the old truck out of the driveway. The sky was pale and quiet, like it hadn’t made up its mind yet. My hands clutched the steering wheel so tight my knuckles turned white.
It felt like if I let go, the whole thing might just fall apart—me, the truck, the day. Tyler sat beside me in the passenger seat, small but sitting tall, proud of the seat he was finally big enough to ride in. His t-shirt was wrinkled, like it had been balled up in the corner all night, and his jeans had a patch on one knee.
He didn’t care. He held his half-eaten slice of toast like it was the most important thing in the world. Like it gave him power.
“Got anything fun planned today, baby?” I asked, glancing over at him, trying to put a smile on my face that didn’t feel like a lie. That ache in my chest—deep, old, familiar—tightened. Three years gone, and Tom’s name still echoed like a song with no end.
Tyler took a big bite of toast and chewed for a second before answering. “Yeah. It’s Father’s Day at school.
We’re doing presentations.”
The words hit like a slap. The toast in my hand slipped onto my lap, forgotten. I focused so hard on
I blinked at the road ahead, its narrow lines weaving through cornfields on both sides.
My throat closed up, and I could feel the pressure behind my eyes. I focused so hard on my own grief, I forgot how Tyler felt about his late father at moments. “Oh,” I said, barely louder than a breath.
“That… sounds nice. What will you do?”
He gave a little shrug, like it was no big deal. “I got all figured out, Mom!” he said brightly, grinning like he had a secret.
I looked at him. Really looked. His eyes sparkled, full of something I didn’t understand yet.
Not fear, not sadness. Something else. Something quiet and strong.
That was all he gave me. No details. Just that one sentence.
He looked calm. Even excited. Like this day didn’t weigh on him the way it did on me.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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