Three weeks after my wife d:ied, I took our newborn twins to the mall to buy the yellow sleepers she wanted. When both babies needed changing, I made the only choice I had. Then one woman turned my hardest day into a public lesson she never expected.
That morning, I sat in my car outside the mall with Ivy and Lily asleep in their stroller, while Claire’s voice played from my phone. It was an old voice note she had recorded before the delivery.
“Mason, please remember to buy more zip-up sleepers.”
In the recording, I laughed. “What’s wrong with the button ones?”
“No buttons at three in the morning,” Claire said. “Trust me. You’ll cry before the babies do.”
I pressed my thumb against my wedding ring.
“Fine,” my recorded voice said. “Zip-ups.”
“And yellow,” she added. “Everyone buys pink, and they’re babies, not cupcakes.”
I laughed in the car, then covered my mouth when the laugh turned into something else.
Claire had been gone for three weeks. I still caught myself turning to tell her things.
People kept saying I was brave for doing all of it alone.
I was not. I was exhausted, frightened, and figuring everything out as I went.
But Claire had asked for yellow sleepers, so I got out of the car.
“Okay, girls,” I whispered, lifting the stroller handle. “We’re doing this for Mom.”
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