After a year of grief, a mother makes one fragile attempt to pull her daughter back into the world. But a painful afternoon before prom reveals that her daughter’s silence has been carrying more than loss.
The house had learned to hold its breath after Mason died. A year of silence had settled into the walls, into the unwashed coffee mugs, into the closed door at the end of the hall where my daughter lived now like a ghost in her own bedroom.
I stood at that door most mornings, palm flat against the wood, listening for the sound of her breathing.
Hazel was seventeen. She used to dance in the kitchen while I made pancakes.
After the funeral, Hazel stopped eating.
Mason used to call her Hazelnut and steal the syrup. He used to promise her, loud enough for the whole table to hear, that if no boy was smart enough to ask her to prom, he would put on a tux himself and take her.
He never got the chance. A truck on Route 9, a wet road, a Tuesday.
After the funeral, Hazel stopped eating. Then she ate too much. Then she stopped going outside.
Eli was the only person she let near her. The quiet boy from two houses down, her best friend since sixth grade, would walk over after school with her homework folded under his arm.
He never knocked too loud. He never asked her questions.
He shrugged like it was nothing. To him, I think it was.
Some afternoons I would find them on the porch, not speaking, Hazel’s head tipped sideways against the railing while Eli sketched something in a notebook.
“Mrs. Mave,” he said one afternoon, looking up at me. He had called me that since he was twelve, when he decided calling me only by my first name felt too casual and anything more formal felt too far. “She ate half a sandwich today.”
“Thank you, Eli.”
“For what?”
“For sitting with her.”
I found her journals once.
He shrugged like it was nothing. To him, I think it was.
I found her journals once, the old ones from freshman year, tucked behind a row of paperbacks. Names of girls. Names of boys. Cruel little phrases written in her round handwriting, the kind of words you only write down because you cannot say them out loud.
I put the journal back exactly where I found it.
That spring, prom invitations started arriving in other girls’ mailboxes. I saw the pictures their mothers posted online, daughters in pastel dresses holding bouquets.
I knocked on Hazel’s door.
“Mason wanted you to go.”
“Sweetheart. Prom is in three weeks.”
“I’m not going, Mom.”
“Mason wanted you to go.”
She was quiet for a long time. Then I heard the bed creak and footsteps, and the door cracked open an inch.
“Mason wanted a lot of things.”
“He wanted you to wear a dress and dance and laugh,” I said. “He told me so.”
“Mom.”
I should have known better.
“Just try one on. One dress. If you hate it, we come home and never speak of it again. Deal?”
She looked at me through that inch of open door, and I saw something flicker behind her eyes that I had not seen in months. Not hope, exactly. Curiosity, maybe. A small permission.
“One dress,” she said.
I drove to the strip mall the next Saturday with my hands tight on the wheel and a knot of something dangerous in my chest. Hope. After a year of nothing, I was daring to feel hope again.
I should have known better.
By the fourth shop, I could see Hazel folding into herself.
The first three boutiques used softer words. “Limited inventory.” “Sample sizes only.” “We could special order, but not in time.” Still, it was clear they thought she was too big for their dresses.
By the fourth shop, I could see Hazel folding into herself, shoulders rising toward her ears the way they had at Mason’s funeral.
I tried to keep my voice bright.
“There’s one more place. The pretty one on Maple.”
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