They had spent Sunday doing what families do: visiting a grandmother, sharing news that felt like a miracle. After years of sacrifice, they had finally bought a home of their own. Relatives remember the sparkle in Drielle’s eyes as she spoke about painting the children’s rooms, about birthdays, school days, a future that now exists only in unfinished plans and broken sentences.
When the coffins arrived at the City Council, even those who barely knew them wept as if they had lost their own. In a small town, grief is never private; it spills into bakeries, churches, and bus stops. People cling to each other, searching for meaning where there is only absence. The highway remains the same, but for Sidrolândia, every passing truck now sounds like an echo of a night that stole a mother, three children, and the simple, sacred promise of tomorrow.