After The Funeral, His Family Packed His Life Into Suitcases-heuh

Claire Bennett came home from her husband’s funeral still wearing black, with rain on her coat and lilies in her hair.

The house should have been quiet.

She had prepared herself for that silence all afternoon.

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She had imagined the awful little things waiting for her: Ethan’s slippers by the sofa, his half-used notebook on the desk, the tea mug he always left too close to the edge of the sink.

She had told herself she would put the kettle on, stand in the kitchen, and let the truth arrive slowly.

Ethan would not call from the living room.

Ethan would not ask whether she wanted toast.

Ethan would not smile when she came through the door and say, “You’re home.”

That was the grief she expected.

What she found was worse in a different way.

Every light in the flat was on.

Voices moved through the rooms.

Zips opened and closed.

Drawers scraped.

A suitcase wheel knocked against the skirting board.

Claire froze in the doorway, one hand still on the handle, her handbag slipping down her wrist.

In the dining area, Margaret Walker stood with a folded tissue in one hand and Claire’s life under command in the other.

Ethan’s mother had not removed her funeral hat.

She had simply turned mourning into management.

Around her were eight relatives, all moving with the busy confidence of people who had decided that speed looked like entitlement.

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