He Claimed His Father’s Chair. Then the Memorial Letter Was Read-tantan

The dining room still smelled like pot roast, candle wax, and lemon furniture polish when Emily Bell touched the back of her husband’s chair.

For forty-two years, Thomas Bell had sat at the head of that table.

Not because he demanded it.

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Because everyone naturally made room for him there.

He was the kind of man who fixed loose cabinet handles before anyone asked, warmed the car before church when the weather turned cold, and left folded grocery coupons beside Emily’s purse every Friday morning.

Six months after his funeral, the chair still looked occupied.

That was the strange part about grief.

A person could be gone, and still the room would remember the weight of him.

Emily was eighty-four, smaller than she used to be, with careful silver hair and hands that had folded more laundry, packed more lunches, and signed more school forms than anyone at that table cared to count.

She had spent the afternoon cooking because she did not know how to grieve without feeding people.

There was a casserole cooling on the counter.

There were rolls under a towel.

There were paper napkins folded beside the plates because her granddaughter had forgotten to bring the cloth ones up from the laundry room.

Rain tapped against the front porch windows.

Outside, the small American flag Thomas used to straighten every morning fluttered weakly in the damp air.

Emily looked at it once before she sat down.

She had almost chosen the chair nearest the kitchen.

That was where she had sat for years, close enough to refill glasses and fetch butter and get up without disturbing anyone.

But this was Thomas’s memorial dinner.

The priest was coming at 7:15 p.m.

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