Her Mother’s Button Box Looked Like Trash Until The Colors Aligned-tantan

My 69-year-old mother collected old buttons the way other people saved photographs.

She cut them from abandoned coats in the laundry room.

She slipped them off torn shirts left beside the dumpster.

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She washed them in a little mesh bag, dried them on a towel, and sorted them by color under the yellow lamp near her balcony door.

Pearl in one jar.

Blue in another.

Brass in the battered cookie tin.

Black buttons in the baby-food jar with the label that had been peeled off and replaced with masking tape.

My sister Emily hated all of it.

She hated the jars.

She hated the little piles on the table.

She hated the way Mom could sit quietly for two hours, scissors in hand, separating a button from thread as if she were rescuing something alive.

What Emily really hated was that grief had not made our mother elegant.

It had made her practical.

Messy.

Stubborn.

Visible.

Our father, Michael, had been a ship captain before he vanished at sea eighteen years earlier.

I was old enough to remember the smell of salt on his jacket when he came home.

Emily was old enough to remember him, too, but she had polished her memories until they looked good in conversation.

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