Losing my parents changed everything, but it wasn’t until the will was read that I realized just how alone I really was.
I always thought grief would come crashing in like a wave — loud, violent, all at once. But for me, it trickled in. A voicemail from a stranger.
A sterile hospital waiting room. Two cops who wouldn’t meet my eyes.
My name’s Rachel. I’m 19, and last fall, my world fell apart when my parents died in a car crash.
One minute they were on their way to dinner; the next, I was standing in a cold hallway at 3 a.m., clutching a paper cup of vending machine coffee, wishing I could hit rewind.
After the funeral, the house was too quiet. I kept expecting to hear Mom humming in the kitchen or Dad calling from the garage. I barely left my room except to feed the cat and microwave frozen meals.
Grief has a way of shrinking the world.
Then came the will reading.
I showed up in borrowed black slacks and a blazer that still smelled like my mom’s perfume. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking, so I twisted the hem of my shirt like it was a life raft.
…The story doesn’t end here, it continues on the next page 👇

