A Widow Saved $25,347 for Her Baby. Her Family Wanted a Wedding-myhoa

The first time I heard the number spoken back to me, I did not think of money.

I thought of breath.

$25,347.

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It sat in a savings account with a boring name and a password I had changed three times, but to me it was not a balance.

It was a wall.

On one side was my daughter, still moving beneath my ribs, still fighting through a body that had already lost too much.

On the other side were bills, hospital policies, insurance limits, surgical estimates, and every terrifying sentence a doctor says when she is trying to be gentle.

Jason used to say I treated numbers like enemies.

After he died, I treated one number like a lifeline.

He was five months gone from the world before I understood how cruel paperwork could be.

His life insurance had lapsed two months before the accident because of a payment failure we did not even know had happened.

The company gave me $40,000 and spoke in careful condolences that landed like stapled forms.

The funeral home took its part.

The landlord took his part.

The utility companies took theirs.

Grief took whatever was left of my ability to function for a while, which meant late fees and missed calls and days when brushing my hair felt like climbing a hill.

By the time I could sit at the kitchen table with a calculator and not dissolve, I had about eight thousand dollars left.

I also had a daughter who kicked whenever I ate spicy noodles, the same craving Jason had teased me about the morning he died.

That morning was ordinary in the ugliest possible way.

He kissed my forehead.

He promised dinner.

By evening, two police officers were standing outside my apartment, and one of them had a coffee stain on his shirt cuff.

That stain lived in my mind because it proved the world had continued being normal for other people.

Mine had stopped.

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