After They Waited For Her Death, She Took Back The House They Wanted-Tep

The last time Margaret Whitaker’s heart broke, she was not wearing black.

She was not standing in a cemetery.

She was not holding anyone’s hand while a doctor explained that there was nothing more they could do.

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She was standing in the canned goods aisle of a grocery store in Savannah, Georgia, holding a jar of pickled jalapeños, while the freezer cases hummed behind her and her daughter-in-law laughed about her dying.

Margaret was 68 years old, though she had never thought of herself as old until her children began treating her like a countdown.

She wore a beige cardigan soft from years of washing, stretch pants, and the comfortable shoes Robert had bought her the spring before he died.

She had come to the store for soup, crackers, coffee filters, and a few things she did not really need but kept buying out of habit, because a full pantry made the house feel less empty.

Robert used to say she shopped like the grandchildren were coming over at any minute.

They almost never did anymore.

Margaret turned her cart into the aisle and reached for the jalapeños because Robert had loved them chopped into scrambled eggs.

That was when she heard Sophie.

Her daughter-in-law was on the other side of the shelf, close enough that Margaret could hear the plastic wheels of her cart and the lazy drop of cracker boxes landing inside it.

Sophie did not know Margaret was there.

That was the only reason she told the truth.

“Arthur says we just have to be patient,” Sophie said into her phone, laughing in the careless way people laugh when they are sure no one important is listening.

Margaret paused with the jar in her hand.

“The old lady is already 68,” Sophie continued.

The shelf between them suddenly felt paper-thin.

“Any day now, she’ll be gone, and that big house will be ours. Why waste time visiting her if she already closed her wallet?”

The jar almost fell.

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