Daughter-In-Law Wanted The Widow’s Room — The Will Was Waiting-heuh

My daughter-in-law tried to take the bedroom where my husband died — but on Sunday, my solicitor was waiting with the will spread across the table.

Thursday came in grey and wet, with rain needling the kitchen window and the smell of chilli moving slowly through the house.

Margaret Bennett stood at the hob, stirring with a wooden spoon that had gone smooth from years of use.

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She was sixty-six, though lately she felt older in the mornings and younger only when she forgot Walter was gone.

The kettle had clicked off beside her, leaving a thin curl of steam over a mug she had not touched.

It was the kind of ordinary afternoon that used to comfort her.

Walter had loved Thursdays.

He used to call it the day the house remembered how to breathe, because by late afternoon there would be something warm on the cooker, post on the sideboard, and his reading glasses abandoned wherever he had last sat down.

Now his glasses stayed upstairs beside the lamp.

His Bible remained near the bed.

One white shirt still hung in the wardrobe, buttoned at the neck, because Margaret had tried three times to put it away and failed each time.

The house itself was plain.

A modest semi-detached place with a narrow hall, scuffed skirting boards, a small back garden, and a front step that held rain in one cracked corner.

It was not impressive.

But Margaret and Walter had kept it alive with overtime, careful shopping, skipped holidays, and years of saying, “Next month will be easier.”

Next month rarely was.

Still, the house had become theirs in the slowest, hardest way.

Every room had a cost attached to it.

The kitchen was the year they stopped eating out.

The sitting room carpet was bought after Walter sold a watch he had loved but never admitted missing.

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