They say time heals, but some truths stay buried until they’re ready to be found. Twenty years after a devastating snowstorm took my family, my granddaughter handed me a note that unraveled everything I thought I knew.I’m 70 years old.’ve buried two wives and outlived nearly everyone I called a friend. You’d think by now nothing could shock me.But grief has a funny way of sticking around, changing shape. I thought I’d learned to live with it. Turns out I was just waiting for the truth to find me.That truth started on a night when the snow came down as if it had a grudge.It was a few days before Christmas, 20 years ago.
My son Michael, his wife Rachel, and their two kids had come over for an early holiday dinner at my place. I lived in a small town where everyone waved, whether they liked you or not, and snowstorms were as normal as morning coffee.The weatherman had said it would be light flurries, maybe an inch or two.He was dead wrong.They left around 7 p.m. I remember because Michael stood in the doorway holding his youngest, Emily, half-asleep in her little puffy jacket.He smiled at me the way sons do when they think they’ve got everything under control.”We’ll be fine, Dad,” he said. “I want to get the kids home before it gets too late.”The wind howled when I closed the door behind them, and something in my gut twisted. I remember that part so clearly — as if some alarm in my bones went off too late.