My Sister-In-Law Claimed Mum’s House — Then The Will Exposed Her-ngyen

After Mum’s funeral, my sister-in-law laughed, ‘This is our house,’ and kicked me out. At the will reading the solicitor began, ‘To my daughter, I leave—’ My brother shouted, ‘What on earth?!’ Her face went pale… why?

The house still smelt of lilies the morning after the funeral.

They had been placed in tall glass vases by people who wanted to do something useful and could not find anything useful to do.

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There was cold coffee on the side table, a stack of sympathy cards on the mantelpiece, and a line of muddy footprints by the front mat where neighbours had stood in damp coats, murmuring that Mum was at peace now.

I hated that phrase.

Peace sounded tidy.

What she had left behind was not tidy at all.

I had slept in my childhood bedroom for the first time in years, though sleep was the wrong word for what happened.

I lay under the old duvet listening to the pipes click, the wind worry the window frame, and the occasional car pass on the wet road outside.

My suitcase lay open on the carpet because I could not decide whether I was a guest, a daughter, a carer, or a woman being slowly pushed out of the only house that still smelt like her mother.

One shoe had vanished under the bed.

A cardigan hung over the desk chair.

On the bedside table sat Mum’s last grocery list, folded twice, with her handwriting sloping across the paper in the familiar way that made my throat close.

Milk.

Teabags.

Paracetamol.

Soup.

Such ordinary words can be cruel after someone dies.

They prove a person was still planning to be here.

For eight months I had lived around Mum’s illness.

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