I Called My Late Wife’s Number and Surprisingly Someone Picked up the Phone

38

After my wife Kate’s death, I often called her number to hear her on the answering machine. Once, the machine cut off, and I distinctly heard her say, “What are you doing? No!” before the call ended.

Convinced it was her, I began investigating. It was a normal Sunday, and I sat in “Paprika,” a small café in the city’s heart. The area was full of life, and the smell of coffee and pastries filled the air.

People laughed and talked. The baristas moved smoothly, always smiling as they worked, and music played softly in the background. But I felt alone.

This café was special to Kate and me. We came here every weekend for seven years. Without her, everything felt different.

The warmth didn’t reach me. Every corner reminded me of her. Our first date, her birthdays, her favorite cinnamon roll.

I missed Kate. I missed her laugh, her touch, and her smile, so I dialed her number again, hoping to hear her on the answering machine. “Hi, you’ve reached Kate…” Her cheerful voice brought both comfort and pain.

I’d called many times since she passed. It was how I remembered her. I thought about the day I proposed, our wedding, and all the times she supported me.

Kate’s funeral was a few days ago. It was incredibly hard. The day was gray and cold.

Empty. The ceremony passed in a blur,

and everyone’s words of comfort sounded distant. I couldn’t believe my wife, the love of my life, was gone.

Her death was a shock, too. She died after her car fell into a canyon, and the doctors couldn’t do anything. “She’s gone,” they said.

Those words stayed with me. But I still had people who loved me. After Kate’s death, her twin sister, Amanda, and her husband, Kyle, were my only family.

Amanda was sick and used a wheelchair. She only had a few years left. Still, she told me, “We’ll get through this together,

Peter.” Kyle was supportive too.

“We’re here for you,” he said, as we shared our grief, finding solace in the nice memories we all had of Kate. Lost in thought at that café, I didn’t even feel someone approaching me until a gentle tap nudged my shoulder. It was Carmen, a relative of Kate’s.

I’d only met her briefly at our wedding. She was glad to see me, but I quickly realized she had no idea what had happened to Kate. “What happened?

The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇