Grief didn’t hit me like a storm. It slid in quietly, the night I pressed play and heard my dead daughter’s voice. Years of running from the hurt ended in a single crackling whisper from inside a dusty bear. A four-year-old’s wish. A father’s broken promise.
I was deep into another endless haul when Snow tipped over in the passenger seat. The seam along his back had split just enough to show something tucked inside. I pulled over, hands shaking in the glow of the dashboard, and reached in. There was a tiny recorder, wrapped in pink tissue, the kind she used for birthday cards. I pressed play, and her voice filled the cab, younger, brighter, untouched by hospitals and machines.
“Hi, Dad. If you found this, it means you kept going like you promised. Don’t be sad, okay? I’m still riding with you. Buckle Snow in. Buckle me in.” The highway blurred. I realized grief wasn’t about holding on or letting go; it was about driving with both. So now Snow stays beside me, the seatbelt always clicked, every mile a quiet conversation between who I lost and who I’m still trying to be.