My new daughter-in-law threw away 100 Easter bunnies my grandson had knitted for sick kids at the hospital — and what happened next came faster than she expected.

What a nine-year-old made from his mother’s sweaters, and what it cost to keep it whole.

Ihave lived long enough to know that grief does not leave a house when a person does. It does not follow the casket out the door or dissolve in the weeks after the funeral when the food stops arriving and the sympathy cards stop coming and everyone who visited goes back to their own lives and expects yours to do the same. It settles in. It finds a corner and occupies it quietly, and there are mornings when you walk into a room and feel it before you understand what you are feeling, a weight that has no visible source, an alteration in the quality of the air. My name is Ruth. I have watched grief move through this house for two years now, and most of what I have learned about it I have learned from my grandson Liam, who is nine years old and understands things about loss that most adults spend a lifetime trying to articulate and never quite manage.

He was seven when his mother died. Emily. My son Daniel’s first wife, a woman who had the rare quality of filling a room without asserting herself into it, who was simply present in a way that made the room feel more inhabited, warmer, more worth being in. She knitted. She knitted the way some people garden or cook, with a kind of unhurried, meditative absorption, sitting in the evenings with her yarn and her needles while Daniel watched television and Liam lay on the carpet doing his homework or not doing it, the soft click of the needles a sound that became, over the years, the sound of the house itself being at peace.

The cancer was pancreatic. It moved the way that particular cancer moves, which is fast and without mercy and without the grace period that allows a family to prepare. There was a diagnosis and then there were treatments and then there was a morning when the treatments had done everything they could do, and that was the end of it. Liam was seven. He had his mother for the whole of his conscious life up until that point and then, in the way these things happen, he did not.

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