An Indiana Janitor Turned Funeral Flowers Into A Reason To Stay-tantan

Harold learned the weight of silence after his wife died.

It was not the dramatic kind of silence people talk about at funerals.

It was the small kind that waited in his apartment every evening in Indiana, sitting in his wife’s chair, hovering near the kitchen sink, lying across the other half of the bed as if it had paid rent.

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He was eighty-five years old, and three nights a week he cleaned a funeral home after the families left.

He did not prepare bodies.

He did not speak during services.

He came in after the organ music stopped, after the last handshake in the lobby, after the parking lot emptied and the chapel smelled of lilies, candle wax, damp coats, and coffee that had gone cold in paper cups.

His job was simple: sweep the chapel, empty the trash, wipe the fingerprints from the brass handles, fold the extra programs, and mop the hallway where mourners tracked in rain or snow or whatever weather had decided to follow them into grief.

The funeral director called him Mr. Harold, even though Harold had once told him that plain Harold was fine.

The young receptionist left the utility closet unlocked so he would not have to jiggle the old key with his stiff fingers.

People were decent to him there, and sometimes that almost hurt more than being ignored.

Decency ended at the front door.

After work, Harold drove home in an old pickup with one headlight that was brighter than the other, passing porches with small flags, mailboxes leaning toward the road, and kitchens where families still had noise coming through the curtains.

At his apartment, he put his keys in the little ceramic dish his wife had bought years earlier.

Every time they landed with that thin clink, Harold expected her voice from the next room.

— Don’t forget your pills, Harry.

Nobody called him Harry anymore.

Every Friday morning, Harold drove to the cemetery before the sun had fully burned the mist off the grass.

His wife’s grave was not far from a maple tree.

He knew every turn of the cemetery road and every crack in the narrow path because grief makes a person memorize useless things.

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