My Parents Skipped The Funeral, Then Asked For The Insurance Money-kimochi

I buried my husband and my six-year-old daughter on a gray morning that smelled like wet pavement, lilies, and coffee nobody had the strength to drink.

The funeral home was warm in that uncomfortable way older buildings get when the heat kicks on too hard, but my hands still felt cold inside my sleeves.

Daniel’s picture sat on one easel.

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Our daughter’s picture sat on another.

The two frames were surrounded by white flowers, folded tissues, and sympathy cards from people who had cried harder than some of my own blood.

I kept staring at the front row beside me, even though I knew the seats would stay empty.

My parents were not coming.

They had told me two days earlier that the trip was already paid for, that canceling would be complicated, that grief did not change the fact that nonrefundable meant nonrefundable.

My younger brother had gone with them.

He had not called Daniel’s mother.

He had not asked what time the service started.

He had not even sent one sentence that sounded like he understood what had happened to my house, my life, my child’s pink toothbrush still sitting by the bathroom sink.

At first, I told myself shock did strange things to people.

I told myself maybe my mother could not face the sight of two coffins.

I told myself my father had always been useless around sorrow, the kind of man who changed the subject when someone cried, but that did not mean he was cruel.

People make excuses for family because the alternative is admitting you were born into a room where love had conditions printed in fine print.

Then my phone buzzed.

The pastor was speaking softly about mercy and endurance, and the chapel had gone so still I could hear someone crying into a tissue three rows behind me.

I looked down because I thought it might be the funeral director, or Daniel’s cousin asking where to send food, or a neighbor checking whether I needed help getting home.

It was my mother.

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