Grandma Found Her Grandson Alive After His Funeral—Then Cars Arrived-habe

Coming home from my eight-year-old grandson’s funeral, I found him standing on my porch in torn clothes.

He was supposed to be in the ground.

Instead, Tyler stood under my porch light, soaked through, shaking so hard his teeth clicked.

Image

One sneaker was missing.

His blue school jacket was ripped at the shoulder.

Mud streaked across his cheek like somebody had dragged him through the dark and dropped him at my door only when they were done being cruel.

“Grandma Ellie.”

I had left Maplewood Cemetery less than an hour earlier.

Rain from the graveside still clung to my black dress, cold against my knees, and my coat carried the wet, sweet smell of church lilies pressed too close to grief.

My fingers still ached from holding the funeral program.

My ears still rang with the minister saying Tyler James Porter in that careful voice people use when a child’s name is being attached to death.

For one long second, my hand stayed frozen on the deadbolt.

Part of me was still watching a white casket sink into rain-soaked Ohio earth while my son Brian held Michelle in front of half the town.

The other part of me was staring at the same eight-year-old child on my porch, breathing.

“Grandma,” Tyler whispered again. “Help me.”

That was when my body remembered it belonged to me.

I dropped to my knees and took his face in both hands.

His skin was cold.

Mud slid under my fingers.

His bottom lip trembled, but he did not cry.

He looked past my shoulder first, toward the street.

That look told me more than the torn jacket did.

He was not lost.

He was running.

Read More