Two Weeks Later Elara existed.She didn't live. She didn't grieve properly. She simply… existed.The apartment felt wrong without her mother's soft breathing, without the small sounds she used to make - the gentle clink of her teacup in the morning, the shuffle of her slippers on the worn carpet, the soft humming she would do while folding the clothes. The silence pressed down on Elara's chest until breathing felt like work, until even the simplest tasks seemed impossible.She went through the motions like a ghost.Signed papers at the funeral home, her hand moving mechanically across forms she barely read. Arranged a small funeral that almost no one attended - just a few elderly neighbors who had known her mother from the building, a nurse from the hospital who had been kind, and Maya, her childhood friend who had taken a bus from two states away to be there. “I'm so sorry,” Maya had whispered, hugging Elara tight. “I wish I had known sooner. I would have helped.”But there was n
Last Updated : 2026-01-31 Read more