They would replay those seconds for years, each person trapped in their own version of the same nightmare. The groom, with shaking hands and tear-streaked cheeks, would remember the weight of her head in his lap, the way her eyes refused to open no matter how many times he called her name. Her mother would remember the sound she made when the doctor quietly shook his head, a sound that didn’t feel human, torn from a place beyond words.
In the weeks that followed, the flowers wilted, the cake went uneaten, and the wedding favors remained in unopened boxes—mute relics of a future that vanished in an instant. Yet amid the unbearable grief, a harsh, luminous truth emerged: nothing is promised, not even the next breath. Those who loved her began to live differently—more urgently, more honestly—carrying her memory not as a ghost of tragedy, but as a fierce reminder to love fully while time is still theirs.
