A YEAR AFTER MY SON’S DEATH, I SAW MY DAUGHTER-IN-LAW’S GRAVE AT THE CEMETERY.

Ma’am… we’ve arrived,” the cabbie said as he pulled over at the cemetery gate, jolting me out of my thoughts.

I stepped out of the cab, my gaze fixed on the cemetery gate, and turned to the driver. “Please wait for me here… I won’t be long.” With a deep, painful sigh, I entered the graveyard, the flowers trembling in my hand.

The silence of the cemetery was haunting as I carefully made my way across the row of graves, searching for Christopher’s resting place. A wave of painful emotions washed over me as I approached his grave and knelt down, gently laying the flowers on the ground.

My baby… Oh, Christopher. Mama’s here… I’ve come to see you…” I broke into tears as I gently brushed my trembling hands against Christopher’s tombstone. But then, something caught my eye—another grave, right beside Christopher’s.

A surge of disbelief gripped me as I read the epitaph etched on the headstone next to his. I could not believe my eyes: “In Loving Memory of Harper. S.” I blinked hard, trying to steady myself. “Harper… my sweet daughter-in-law. How did this happen?” My mind was reeling with disbelief. Only a few weeks after Christopher’s funeral, Harper had vanished from my life. We hadn’t parted on bad terms, but I had been so lost in my own grief that I failed to keep in touch the way I should have. People drift away, I used to tell myself. But I never imagined that she, too, would be gone from this world.

Trembling from head to toe, I reached out and brushed my fingers across Harper’s name. “I’m so sorry,” I whispered, tears clouding my vision. My heart ached at the thought of losing not just my son, but also this woman who had brought so much warmth and love into our family.

I knelt there for what felt like an eternity, choking on my sobs and memories. I thought about the day Christopher introduced Harper to me. She had a bright, easygoing smile, and she called me “Ma” from the very start. Her compassion and wit made Christopher a better man, and my husband and I—back when he was still around—couldn’t have been happier for them. They married young, full of optimism and big dreams. It never crossed my mind that I’d be standing over both their graves, one on each side, only a few years later.

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