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For most of our marriage, I believed my husband felt nothing deeply. Sam had a way of moving through life that felt impenetrable, as if emotion simply slid off him. When our sixteen-year-old son died in a sudden accident, my world shattered. I screamed, cried, stopped functioning altogether.
At the hospital, he stood motionless, hands folded, eyes dry. At the funeral, his expression never wavered. When we returned home to a house stripped of noise and laughter, he retreated into schedules, work, and long silences. I mistook his stillness for absence. His quiet felt like abandonment.
Grief is lonely—but believing you’re grieving alone inside a marriage is unbearable.
Bit by bit, resentment replaced compassion. Conversations disappeared. We stopped reaching for each other. Eventually, what remained between us wasn’t anger—it was emptiness. I left the city, chasing distance I thought might feel like healing. Sam stayed. He remarried. We became strangers linked only by a shared loss we never spoke of again.
Twelve years later, he died without warning. Sudden. Final. The way our son had.

It was his second wife.
She told me about a lake.
A place I had forgotten—but Sam never had.
She told me Sam went there often. Sometimes weekly. Sometimes daily.
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