Dad’s Lawyer Stopped the Funeral Eviction With One Hidden Document-congtien

The first lie at my father’s funeral was the lilies.

They stood in white towers around Harrison Hudson’s casket, clean and bright and almost arrogant in their beauty.

Their sweetness filled O’Malley and Sons Funeral Home until every breath tasted like sugar laid over something rotten.

Image

I remember thinking that grief should have smelled rougher than that.

It should have smelled like hospital soap and burnt coffee from the oncology waiting room.

It should have smelled like the menthol balm Dad rubbed into his wrists when the pain made his hands curl.

It should have smelled like the blue recliner where I slept for three years because he was afraid to wake up alone.

Instead, the room smelled like lilies.

Forty people had come to say goodbye to my father.

They came in black coats, dark dresses, polished shoes, and the careful voices people use when they want to seem tender without getting involved.

Neighbors lined the back rows.

Men who had worked for Hudson Residential Contracting sat with their caps pressed between their hands, looking too large and uncomfortable for the padded funeral chairs.

Women from my mother’s church circle whispered near the aisle, touching pearls and tissues and each other’s elbows.

Old clients stood near the guest book, saying he had built their deck, repaired their roof, fixed their floor after the flood, always on time, always fair.

They remembered the public version of him.

I remembered the private one.

I remembered him at 2:13 a.m., gripping the bathroom sink while trying not to wake my mother.

I remembered him apologizing because I had to measure out another dose of medicine.

I remembered the way his eyes filled when he could no longer climb the stairs at 118 Brookside Lane without stopping halfway up.

That house had been his pride.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *