The church felt impossibly small for a grief this vast.
The air was thick with the smell of lilies and aged, polished wood—a weighty scent that clung to my throat and followed each breath, as though sorrow itself had substance. Light filtered through stained-glass windows, casting muted blues and warm ambers across the pews, but nothing eased the pressure crushing my chest. I sat in the front row, back rigid, hands shaking as I held two urns no parent should ever be asked to carry—both heartbreakingly light for the lives they contained.
My twins, Caleb and Noah, should have been six months old.
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