My Family Skipped The Funeral, Then Came For The Insurance Money-heuh

I buried my husband and my little girl on a Thursday under a sky so low and gray it felt like the clouds had come down to sit with us.

The funeral home smelled like lilies, damp wool, and coffee that had been sitting too long on a warmer near the hallway.

Every sound felt too loud.

Image

The squeak of dress shoes on carpet.

The soft snap of tissues being pulled from a box.

The low, careful voices people use when they do not know what to say and are afraid silence might be worse.

I stood at the front of the chapel with my hands folded so tightly that my fingernails left half-moons in my palms.

Ethan’s coffin was on my left.

Sophie’s was on my right.

I kept looking from one to the other like my mind could not hold both losses at once.

It would land on Ethan first, and I would see his work jacket thrown over the chair at home, the one he always promised he would hang up properly and never did.

Then it would land on Sophie, and I would see her yellow rain boots by the back door, the small ones with the scuffed toes and dried mud around the soles.

Two coffins were too many for one room.

Two names on one funeral program were too many for one piece of paper.

People came to me in a slow line and hugged me carefully, as if grief were a bruise they might press too hard.

Someone from Ethan’s job squeezed my shoulder and said he was the kind of man who helped before anyone asked.

One of Sophie’s teachers cried so hard she could barely get the words out.

She told me Sophie had once given half her lunch to a boy who forgot his and then acted annoyed when anyone praised her, like kindness was supposed to be private.

That sounded like my daughter.

That sounded like Ethan too.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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