Fifteen years ago, my brother disappeared three days after we buried his wife.
No explanation.
No goodbye.
Just a knock at my front door on a cold Thursday evening… and three little girls standing beside a tired social worker, holding one overstuffed suitcase that looked like it carried the last pieces of their entire world.
They were three, five, and eight years old.
The youngest clung to a stuffed rabbit with one missing ear and kept asking the same heartbreaking question every ten minutes.
“When is Mommy coming home?”
The middle child refused to let go of her sisters’ hands, as if someone might take them away too.
And the oldest… she didn’t cry at first. She stood there completely silent, trying so hard to be brave that it made my chest ache.
I remember kneeling in front of them and forcing myself to smile even though I felt like my own world had cracked open.
“Hey,” I whispered gently. “You can stay with me for as long as you need.”
The oldest finally looked up at me.
“How long is that?”
I didn’t know how to answer.
Because at that moment, I still believed my brother would come back.
I told myself something terrible must’ve happened to him. That grief had broken him. That maybe he was somewhere trying to put his life back together after losing Laura in that horrible car accident.
Because what kind of father disappears after his wife dies and leaves his daughters behind?
Not my brother.
Not the man I grew up with.
At least… that’s what I wanted to believe.
But days turned into weeks.
Weeks became months.
Then years.