I Baked Pies For Hospice Patients Until One Arrived With My Name And I Could Not Stay Standing

Grief pulled me into the kitchen long before I understood why. I was sixteen when everything I knew collapsed in the middle of a bitter January night. I had earbuds in, pretending homework mattered, when the smell of smoke cut through the music and the alarm started shrieking. My dad dragged me outside into snow that burned my bare feet, then ran back in for my mom and my grandfather. None of them came back out.

Later they said it was an electrical problem in the kitchen—two calm words for something that erased photographs, savings, and every small object that had ever proved I belonged somewhere.

A youth shelter gave me a bed in a shared dorm and a locker for my clothes. My aunt Denise called once to say she didn’t have space for me. Still, she managed to take half the insurance money that was meant for clothes and therapy and spent it on a new car, a wine fridge, and what she jokingly called her “grieving wardrobe.” I didn’t argue. When you’re numb, silence can look a lot like agreement.