I Called My Father-In-Law A Burden—Then His Solicitor Came-Teptep

For twenty years, my 89-year-old father-in-law ate at my table without chipping in a single penny.

I called him a burden, until he died and a solicitor knocked on my door with a folder that left me breathless.

Jacob Morales lived in the small back room of our house, just beyond the narrow hallway where coats hung too close together and damp shoes collected by the door.

Image

It was the room beside the washing machine, the room that always smelt of powder, old towels, and the faint chill of a house that cost too much to heat.

My wife, Ellen, called it the best we could do.

I called it twenty years of being stretched until there was barely anything left of me.

Jacob was not a wicked man.

That was the sentence I used whenever I felt myself resenting him too much.

He was old.

He was quiet.

He was stubborn in the way only a man who had outlived most of his strength could be.

Every morning, he came down the hall in his grey fedora, slow as rain on glass, and sat at our kitchen table as if he were trying not to take up space.

He always took up space anyway.

Not loudly.

Not rudely.

Just constantly.

There was his mug by the kettle, his tablets near the bread bin, his radio humming in the corner, his slippers under the chair, his coat on the peg, his breathing behind the thin wall at night.

He would warm his food, stir his coffee, and say, “Thank you, son,” in a voice so soft it made me feel worse for being angry.

But thank you did not fill the meter.

Thank you did not pay the chemist.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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