Dad Buried Gran’s Savings Book — Then The Bank Called Police-heuh

My dad threw my grandmother’s savings book into her grave and said it was worthless.

The next day I went to the bank, and the teller turned pale before calling the police.

“This book isn’t worth a penny,” he said. “Let it rot with the old woman.”

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He did not lower his voice.

He wanted everyone at the cemetery to hear him.

The little blue book left his gloved hand and landed on my grandmother Lupita’s chest, right where the damp flowers had already begun to collapse.

For a moment, the whole burial seemed to stop breathing.

My uncle looked away first.

One cousin stared at the mud on her shoes.

The priest closed his book slowly, as if he had suddenly remembered somewhere else he needed to be.

Nobody said my father had gone too far.

Nobody stepped towards the coffin.

Nobody picked up the book.

They had all learnt, in one way or another, that Víctor Salazar was easiest to survive if you let him finish speaking.

I stood on the wet grass in a borrowed black dress, my hands stiff at my sides.

The rain had thinned to a grey mist, but the cold had got into my bones.

I had slept in broken minutes the night before, sitting upright in my rented room with the lamp still on and the kettle untouched beside the sink.

Every time I closed my eyes, I saw my grandmother’s hand searching for mine.

Two nights before she died, she had squeezed my fingers so hard that I had nearly cried out.

“Mariana,” she whispered.

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