The teacher’s words sliced through me like a knife. I felt the room spin, my reality cracking in an instant. My dead daughter was suddenly everywhere and nowhere. My surviving twin, Lily, stood inches away, oblivious to the storm consuming me. And then I saw the other girl—the same curls, the same chin, the same laugh, the same dar… Continues…
I stood frozen in the doorway, watching that little girl exist in a body that mirrored the one I had buried. For a heartbeat, I let myself believe in miracles, in second chances, in impossible resurrections. But beneath that rush came the sharp, necessary truth: this child was not mine. She had a mother who kissed her forehead, a life that did not belong to my grief.
Tears blurred my vision as I stepped back, feeling the weight of both love and loss pressing into my chest. Lily’s small hand slipped into mine, grounding me in the only present I truly had. I realized that my daughter’s twin did not live in another classroom or another city; she lived in every memory, every story, every breath we took to honor her. I walked out of that school holding tighter to the child beside me, and gentler to the ghost I carry within.
