Dead Man's Profile
Dead Man's Profile The first post went up at 2:13 a.m. No one noticed it right away, which would later bother people more than anything else. There was nothing urgent about it, nothing that demanded attention, and in that quiet, it slipped past the natural defenses grief tends to build. If it had been dramatic, if it had carried even a hint of something unnatural, someone might have questioned it sooner. Instead, it read like Evan. Funny thing about silence. You think it’s empty until you stay in it long enough. It gathered a handful of likes by morning. Old coworkers, a cousin, someone from college who still followed him out of habit more than connection. A few comments came in—soft, cautious acknowledgments, the kind people leave when they don’t quite know what they’re responding to but feel like they should say something anyway. “Miss you, man.” “Still doesn’t feel real.” “Thinking about you.” By noon, someone pointed it out. Not loudly. Not in a way that sp...