I always thought grief would be loud. Sirens. Shouting. Things breaking.
Instead, mine arrived quietly — in highway miles and stale coffee breath.
Ten years ago, I was broke, brand new to trucking, and trying to be the kind of dad who shows up with something magical. Emily was turning four. She wanted a teddy bear “as big as me.”
At a dusty flea market outside Dayton, I found him — giant, white, one eye stitched slightly higher than the other. The woman selling him, Linda, looked at my thin wallet and smiled.
“Ten bucks. Dad price.”
Emily wrapped her arms around that bear like she’d just been handed the moon. She named him Snow.
And Snow became our ritual.
Every time I left for a long haul, she dragged him to my truck, struggling under his size, and ordered, “Buckle him in.”
So I did. Seatbelt across his belly. Every time.
At night, when the cab hummed and loneliness tried to settle in my chest, that lopsided face kept it from landing fully. When I came home, Emily would sprint down the driveway, unbuckle him, and say, “See? He protected you.”
I’d tap Snow’s head and reply, “Good job, partner.”
Even when she got older — too cool, too tall, rolling her eyes — she still packed him for me. Called it dumb. But she never forgot.
Her mom, Sarah, hated the bear riding shotgun. Said it made me look childish. Like I needed a mascot to be a parent.
Truth was, I needed anything that felt like home.
Sarah and I didn’t explode. We wore thin.
I was gone. She was exhausted. Our conversations turned into logistics and invoices. By the time Emily was twelve, the divorce papers were signed.
But Emily never stopped handing me Snow before every trip. Quietly. Like a treaty between two houses.
Then cancer arrived the year she turned thirteen.
It started with bruises that didn’t make sense. Then fatigue. Then hospital ceilings and IV poles. Emily named hers “R2-Drip2.”
She hated pity. Cracked jokes at nurses. Made us all laugh when we didn’t want to.