The night before her final flight, Patsy Cline called home from the road. It was late, and the world outside her motel window was quiet — a hum of trucks on the highway, the soft flicker of neon from a diner across the street. She was tired, but her heart was full. Touring had a way of doing that — exhausting her body but filling her soul.

When her son, Randy, picked up the phone, his small voice carried the kind of warmth only a mother could recognize.
“Mama, sing me a song,” he begged.
She laughed, a low, gentle sound that even distance couldn’t dull.
“This late, honey?”
“Just one,” he pleaded again.

So she began to hum “You Belong to Me.” The line crackled through the phone — part lullaby, part farewell. Her voice was soft, tender, alive in a way that seemed to wrap around him like a blanket. As she finished, she said the words she always did:
“Now go to sleep, my darling.”

He didn’t know it then, but that would be the last song he’d ever hear her sing.

Days later, the plane carrying Patsy never made it home. But years passed, and whenever the wind rustled through the curtains of his room, Randy swore he could still hear her voice. The melody wasn’t loud — it didn’t need to be. It was there in the whisper of leaves, in the sigh of night air, in every quiet moment that reminded him love never really leaves.

Her music lived on the radio, in records, in hearts across the world. But for Randy, her greatest song would always be the one no one else heard — a mother’s lullaby carried by the wind, still finding its way home.

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