
I got furious and kicked the dirt beside the tiny grave, anger spilling out of me in waves I couldn’t control. How could she do this? After everything—after I opened my home, after I stood beside her when everyone else walked away. The empty space inside me burned hotter than my grief.
But then I noticed something.
The flowers weren’t fresh, but they weren’t dead either. Someone had been coming here. The headstone, small and simple, had a name carved into it—one I had never heard her say out loud. Beneath it, a date. Her baby’s date.
My anger softened, replaced by something heavier.
Guilt.
I remembered how quiet she had been. How she avoided mirrors, how she held her stomach sometimes like she forgot he was gone. I thought she needed distraction. I never realized she needed space to mourn.
My phone buzzed again. Another message.
“I didn’t steal from you. I sold them. He deserved something real. I couldn’t leave him with nothing.”
I sank to my knees.
Tears came fast, blurring the little letters carved in stone. All this time, I thought she had abandoned me—but she had been saying goodbye in the only way she knew how.
I placed my hand gently on the grave and whispered, “You mattered.”
And for the first time, I understood her silence.




