The Invitation
My name is Margaret, I’m 66, and I thought my life would just keep getting quieter after Robert passed away five years ago. Our family—once so close—had drifted apart like ships in the night, each sailing their own course of grief. My son David barely called anymore, and conversations with my daughter-in-law Sheila felt like navigating a minefield. Then, last Tuesday, I found it in my mailbox—a cream-colored envelope with elegant script that made my heart skip. Emily’s wedding invitation. My only granddaughter, the little girl who used to fall asleep on my lap during thunderstorms, was getting married. I sat at my kitchen table, fingers trembling slightly as I traced the embossed flowers on the card. June 15th. Just four months away. I immediately reached for my phone and dialed Emily’s number, something I hadn’t done impulsively in years. When she answered, her voice bubbled with excitement, and for the first time since Robert’s funeral, I felt that flutter of hope in my chest. Maybe this wedding was exactly what our family needed—a reason to come together again, to heal old wounds. If only I’d known then what that beautiful invitation would set in motion, I might have prepared myself better for what was coming.



























































