That was the year our mom got sick. Not the kind of sick that passes. The kind that settles in and slowly takes everything with it.
Just days after the diagnosis, our father left.
No big fight. No dramatic goodbye. Just a quiet admission over dinner that he “wasn’t built for this kind of life” — and that he had already found someone else. Someone who gave him, in his words, “love and joy.”
He said it like it was reasonable. Like we were supposed to understand.
So just like that, it was us.
Five kids. One dying mother.
And two of us — me and my twin brother William — suddenly expected to hold everything together.
Mom fought as long as she could. Even when she was weak, she still asked about us. If we had eaten. If the younger ones were okay. If we were managing school.
She never asked for herself.
Less than a year later, she was gone.
I still remember holding her hand in that hospital room, promising her something I had no idea how to deliver.
“We’ll take care of them.”
At the time, it felt like words. After she died, it became our life.
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