PART 1
The last normal thing my mother ever did before everything changed was hand me a container of chicken soup. Not fancy soup. Not some family recipe written in a cookbook. Just chicken soup in an old plastic container with a blue lid that never seemed to fit correctly.
“You’re too skinny,” she said, pushing it into my hands. “Take it and don’t argue.” I laughed because I had heard those words my entire life. My father stood behind her wearing his faded baseball cap. “Listen to your mother,” he said. “She’s been telling me what to do for forty years and somehow I’m still alive.”
That was my father. Always a joke ready. Always making difficult days feel lighter. I hugged them both and promised I would come back the following weekend. I meant it. But life has a cruel way of turning ordinary promises into regrets.
The next weekend passed. Work became chaotic. A client moved up a deadline. I caught a bad cold. My husband, Michael, worked several extra shifts. My sister Kara called once, but I missed it during a meeting. I texted her afterward: Tell Mom I’ll visit soon.
Soon. A harmless word. Or so we think.
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