The phone rang at exactly 9:12 PM on a Tuesday in late October.
I remember the time because I’d just glanced at the clock, promising
I was twenty-six, working as a paralegal at a small firm in Millbrook, Ohio, and still dreaming of one day becoming a lawyer.
Then my cell phone buzzed—a number I didn’t recognize.
My hand hovered over it for a second, a strange dread settling in my stomach.
“Miss Collins?” a woman’s voice said, far too gently.
“This is County General Hospital. There’s been an accident. Your parents and your brother… you need to come right away.”
The rest of that call is a blur.
I remember my boss telling me to go,
The rain was coming down in sheets, the windshield wipers a frantic metronome against the black sky.
I’m not sure how I got to the hospital.
I think I prayed—over and over, a single word: Please.
When I burst through the emergency room doors, a doctor was waiting for me.
His eyes were kind but exhausted, and I knew before he spoke that my life was about to be cleaved in two.
“Your mother, Elizabeth, was pronounced at the scene. She passed instantly. I’m so sorry.”
Instant.
That word
My mother, with her warm laugh and the way she hummed while cooking, was gone before I could say goodbye.
“Your father, Robert, is in surgery,” the doctor continued.
“His injuries are extensive. We’re doing everything we can. And your brother… Lucas is in the pediatric unit. He’s lucky to be alive.”
Lucky.
I stumbled through the corridors, following a nurse to a small room where my ten-year-old brother lay on a bed, his face pale and scratched, his arm in a sling.
His big brown eyes were open, but they were glassy,
“Luke,” I whispered, rushing to his side.
He didn’t look at me at first.
Then, slowly, he turned his head and his voice came out in a cracked whisper: “I tried to wake them up, Claire. I tried.”
I pulled him gently into my arms, careful of his injuries, and the sobs that broke from his small body will haunt me until my own last breath.
We stayed like that for hours.
Sometime before dawn, the doctor returned to tell us that our father had passed.
His heart simply couldn’t sustain the trauma.
I was twenty-six, and I had become an orphan.
And Lucas—he’d lost both of his parents in the space of a night.
The following days were a fog of funeral arrangements and relatives who descended upon our house with casseroles and anxious whispers.
Our home, a modest two-story with a creaky front porch, suddenly felt like a stage for everyone else’s pity.
I moved through it all in a daze, shaking hands, nodding, while inside I was screaming.
Lucas barely spoke.
He’d sit on the couch, clutching a pillow, his eyes hollow.
When the topic of guardianship came up, the living room buzzed with opinions.
“I can take him to Michigan,” offered my Aunt Karen, my father’s older sister.
“We have a spare room, and he’d be with his cousins.”
“Cleveland might be better,” Uncle Mark countered.
“The schools are excellent, and it’s a fresh start.”
I listened, my throat so tight I could barely swallow.
Every suggestion meant ripping Lucas from the only home he’d ever known, from the school where his best friend waited, from the backyard oak tree with the swing our dad had hung.
It meant losing him, and I couldn’t lose the only family I had left.
So I stood up from my seat, my legs trembling, and spoke with a steadiness I didn’t know I possessed.
“I’ll raise him.”
The room fell silent.
“I have a stable job. I can move back into this house and take over the expenses. He belongs here, with me.”
Aunt Karen’s brow furrowed. “Claire, you’re so young. You have your own life. This is too much.”
Then Lucas, who hadn’t spoken in hours, lifted his head from the pillow.
His voice was thin but clear: “Please don’t leave me, Claire.”
That was the only answer I needed.
We went through the legal process, and after weeks of paperwork and a tearful court hearing, I was granted legal guardianship of my little brother.