My dad died unexpectedly when he was 42. I never saw his wife sad. She told me, “Stop crying!
You’re 16, not a child!”
Just days later, she left to work in a different state. At 18, I found her address and visited her. I froze when I saw her.
She had a new family. A husband, two kids, and not a trace of the woman I remembered. She opened the door with a fake smile that quickly faded.
“What are you doing here?” she asked like I was a salesman, not her dead husband’s daughter. My stomach twisted, but I held my ground. “I just wanted to talk.
About Dad.”
Her new husband came to the door, wrapping an arm around her like I was a threat. “Everything okay?”
She nodded. “Just someone I used to know.”
Someone I used to know.
Those words hit harder than any slap. I left without saying another word. Took a bus back to my college dorm and sat on my bunk for hours.
Dad had died in his sleep from a heart attack. No warning. No sickness.
Just… gone. And his wife, Sharon, was cold as stone at the funeral. She didn’t cry.
Didn’t hold my hand. She even scolded me for wearing sneakers, said I was disrespecting him. But I had always tried to see the good in her.
Dad loved her, so I tried. I really did. After he passed, she packed up her things in under a week and told me she had a job offer out in Idaho.
No goodbye hug. No “I’ll call you.” Just a note on the fridge that read: “Be strong. You’re almost grown.”
And now she had a whole new life, like we never existed.
I started digging. I didn’t even know why. Maybe it was grief, maybe it was curiosity, maybe it was anger finally finding its voice.
I searched online, old emails, receipts—anything I still had from her. That’s when I found an airline confirmation dated three weeks before Dad died. A round trip ticket to Boise, Idaho, booked in her name.
He died on a Tuesday. She flew back the Sunday before. I sat with that for a long time.
I tried to explain it away. Maybe she was planning a trip and canceled it? Maybe it was for a job interview?
But then I found a receipt in one of Dad’s junk drawers—dated three days before his death. A receipt from a motel in Boise. In his name.
I stared at it so long my eyes burned. Did Dad know something? Did he follow her?
I went to the motel. Took a trip out there that summer and stood in front of that dusty old building like it held all the answers. The front desk woman was kind, older, probably in her 60s.