After his mother passed away, my son couldn’t sleep at night—until one evening I overheard what my wife quietly whispered to him.

Three weeks ago, my ex-wife d.ied in a car accident, and in an instant, the world tilted off its axis.

Even though we hadn’t been together for years, she was still our son’s mother. She was still the person who had given him half of his world.

And when she was gone, something inside him seemed to collapse.

Jake is fourteen—tall for his age, his voice already beginning to change.

But since the funeral, he somehow looked smaller.

Like grief had folded him inward.

At first, Jake tried to act like everything was normal.

He went to school.
He nodded politely when teachers offered their condolences.
He shrugged when I asked how he was doing.

“I’m fine,” he kept saying.

But I could see it wasn’t true.

The real storm came at night.

The first nightmare came without warning.

I woke up to Jake screaming my name like someone drowning.

I ran into his room and found him curled into a tight ball on the bed, shaking so violently the mattress trembled beneath him.

His eyes were open.

But they weren’t seeing the room.

They were trapped somewhere else.

Somewhere terrible.

I sat beside him until the sun came up, saying very little—just letting him know he wasn’t alone.

The next night, it happened again.

And then again.

By the fourth night, I stopped pretending this would simply pass.

So I grabbed a blanket and dragged it into his room.

I laid down on the floor beside his bed.

That way, when the nightmares came—and they always did—Jake didn’t have to search the dark.

All he had to do was look down.

And see me there.

Sometimes he’d whisper quietly, almost in disbelief:

“You’re here.”

Then he’d fall back asleep.

My wife, Sarah—who I’ve been married to for two years—watched all of this from the sidelines.

At first, she said nothing.

She simply observed.

Quiet.
Tight-lipped.

I assumed she understood.

I was wrong.

On the fifth night, she finally snapped.

“This has to stop,” she said sharply when she saw me picking up my pillow.

Her voice was cold, irritated.

“This is sick. He’s fourteen.”

I looked at her and said the only thing that mattered.

“I don’t care if Jake is four or forty.”

“He needs me right now.”

She stared at me like I’d just insulted her.

Then she turned and walked away without another word.

A few hours later, something woke me.

The house felt… wrong.

Too quiet.

Jake’s bedroom door was open.

And from inside, I heard Sarah’s voice.

I stepped closer, my heart beginning to pound.

She was sitting on the edge of Jake’s bed in the darkness, holding his hand.

Her voice was soft.

But calculated.

“Let’s keep this between us,” she said.

“Your mom wasn’t even around that much anyway,” she continued.

“And now you’re making your dad choose.”

I froze in the hallway.

My body refused to move.

“You’re not six anymore,” she added.

“Men your age don’t act like this.”

“You need to stop.”

Jake’s shoulders were hunched forward.

He wasn’t crying.

He was staring straight at the wall.

Like someone waiting for a blow.

Something inside me cracked.

Sarah turned and suddenly saw me standing in the doorway.

Her face flickered with surprise.

Then irritation.

“I was helping him,” she said quickly.

“You’re making it worse by coddling him.

He needs to grow up.”

I spoke quietly—because Jake was right there listening.

“You don’t get to say that to him.”

“Not now.”

“Not ever.”

She scoffed.

“You’re being emotionally manipulated by a teenager,” she said.

“He’s playing it up for attention.”

That was the moment something inside me went completely still.

“No,” I said.

“Grief doesn’t have an age limit.”

“My son lost his mother.”

“And I will choose him every single time.”

Sarah crossed her arms.

Her voice was icy.

“Then you’re choosing him over our marriage.”

Maybe she expected me to hesitate.

Maybe she thought I’d try to compromise.

I didn’t.

She packed a bag that night.

And before leaving, she said she’d stay with her sister “until this whole weird situation is over.”

After the door closed behind her, the house felt different.

Quieter.

Lighter.

I sat down on Jake’s bed.

He didn’t say anything.

He just leaned against me the way he used to when he was little.

And I wrapped my arms around him.

Now, in the quiet days after everything happened, I’ve realized something I never thought I would.

I don’t miss her.

Not even a little.

And I’m not sure I want her back.

Because anyone who sees a grieving child as competition…

Is not someone I trust in my home.

Or in my son’s life.

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