His Son Wanted The House After The Funeral, But Laura Left Proof-Tep

At 73, I thought grief would be the heaviest thing I carried out of my wife’s funeral.

I was wrong.

The heaviest thing was the sentence my son whispered beside the church fellowship hall door.

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“From now on, you’ll be on your own.”

Michael said it at 4:42 p.m., after the service, after the burial, after everyone had eaten grocery-store cookies off paper plates and pretended the vending machine coffee did not taste burned.

The fellowship hall smelled like cold coffee, wet wool, lilies, and the faint lemon cleaner somebody had used that morning on the tile floor.

I still had Laura’s memorial card in my hand.

Her picture smiled up from the glossy paper, the same soft smile she used whenever she wanted to make a bad room easier for other people to stand in.

Michael took my elbow and walked me ten steps away from the relatives.

Not far enough to look secretive.

Just far enough to be safe from being overheard.

That was always his way.

He never broke anything loudly when he could do it with a clean voice and a careful face.

Jessica stood outside the front doors near their gray SUV, wearing a camel coat that looked too perfect for a rainy funeral afternoon.

Her sunglasses were pushed onto her head.

Her thumb kept moving over her phone.

She had hugged me at the cemetery with one arm, the way people hug when they are trying not to wrinkle themselves.

Michael cleared his throat.

“Dad, Jessica and I talked.”

I waited.

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