Grief taught me how to live with the unthinkable after losing my daughter. I never expected a phone call from her school two years later to shatter everything I thought I knew.
I buried my daughter, Grace, two years ago. She was 11 when she passed.
People said the pain would dull with time. It didn’t. It just became quieter.
Neil, my husband, handled everything back then and said I shouldn’t see Grace on life support. He also handled the hospital paperwork.
My husband arranged the funeral with a closed-casket, which prevented me from ever seeing my daughter again after Neil told me she was brain-dead. He handled the decisions I couldn’t make because my mind felt wrapped in fog.
She was 11 when she passed.
Neil told me Grace was brain-dead and there wasn’t any hope.
I signed forms I barely read because I couldn’t process anything.
We never had other children. I told him I couldn’t survive losing another one.
***
Then last Thursday morning, something strange happened that sent my life into a tailspin.
The landline rang.
We rarely use it anymore, so the sound startled me so badly that I almost let it go unanswered.
Neil told me Grace was brain-dead.
“Ma’am?” a careful voice asked. “This is Frank, the principal at the middle school your daughter used to attend. I’m sorry to disturb you, but we have a young girl here who came into the office asking to call her mother.”
“What girl? You must have the wrong person,” I said automatically. “My daughter is deceased.”
There was a pause on the line.
“She says her name is ‘Grace,'” Frank continued. “And she looks remarkably similar to the photo we still have in our student database.”
My heart started pounding so hard it hurt.
“My daughter is deceased.”
“That’s impossible.”
“She’s very upset. Please, just speak to her.”
Then I heard a small, trembling voice. “Mommy? Mommy, please come get me?”
The phone slipped from my hand and hit the floor. It was her voice.
Neil walked into the kitchen holding his coffee mug. He froze when he saw my face and the phone on the tile.
“What happened? What’s wrong?”
“That’s impossible.”
“It’s Grace,” I whispered. “She’s at her old school.”
Instead of telling me I was imagining things, he went pale. Truly pale.
He picked up the phone and hung up quickly.
“It’s a scam. AI voice cloning. People can fake anything now. Don’t go there.”
“But whoever it was knew her name. The person on the phone sounded like her, Neil.”
“It’s a scam. AI voice cloning.”
“Obituaries are public. Social media exists. Anyone could pull that information.”
When I grabbed my keys from the hook by the door, Neil stepped in front of me.
“Babe, you can’t go,” he said, panic flashing across his face. “Please.”
“Please what, Neil? My hands were shaking, but my voice wasn’t. “If she’s dead, why are you afraid of a ghost unless she isn’t one?”
“Don’t do this,” he said quietly. “You won’t like what you find.”
“Babe, you can’t go.”
I didn’t answer. I just pushed past him and headed to the car.
The drive was a blur. I don’t remember traffic lights or stop signs and gripping the steering wheel so hard my fingers hurt. When I reached the school, I jumped out and ran inside. The receptionist looked startled to see me.
“She’s in the principal’s office,” she said softly.
I rushed to the principal’s office and barged in.
The girl was sitting across from Frank.
“She’s in the principal’s office.”
She looked about 13, taller and thinner, but it was her.
“Mom?” she whispered.
I crossed the room in seconds and dropped to my knees in front of her.
“My Grace,” I sobbed, pulling her into my arms.
She was warm. Solid. Real!
My daughter wrapped her arms around me as if she were afraid I’d disappear.
She looked about 13.
“Why did you never come for me?” she cried into my shoulder.
“I thought you were gone,” I choked.
Grace pulled back just enough to look at me. Her eyes were red and scared. Before she could respond, someone stepped in behind us. It was Neil. He stood there, breathing hard.
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