Mistress Lit The Memorial Candle, Then Dad’s Final Record Played-Teptep

The first candle at my father’s memorial was meant to be lit by me.

That was not written anywhere official.

It did not need to be.

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Everyone in that small church knew I had been the one beside his hospice bed for months.

I had signed forms with a pen that barely worked.

I had chosen hymns while standing in a kitchen where the kettle clicked off and nobody had the heart to make tea.

I had cut wildflowers from the damp back field because Dad hated flowers that looked too expensive to touch.

He used to say grief should not be polished until it became unrecognisable.

So I wore a plain black dress, pinned my hair back, and told myself I would get through the morning one breath at a time.

The rain started just before the service.

It ticked against the stained-glass windows in soft, constant taps, the kind of sound that makes a room feel smaller.

Neighbours arrived with damp collars and careful faces.

My cousin Rachel squeezed my hand so hard my fingers ached.

My aunt Linda kissed my cheek and said, “Your dad would be proud of you, love.”

I nodded because if I answered, I knew I might break.

Evan stood beside me for the first ten minutes.

My husband looked tired but composed, wearing the dark suit I had collected from the cleaners two days earlier.

He touched the small of my back once, lightly, as though we were still the sort of couple people could look at without feeling sorry.

His mother Margaret sat in the front pew with her handbag in her lap and her chin lifted.

She had never liked too much visible emotion.

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