She Skipped Mom’s Funeral, Then Came for the House and Safe-Tep

My sister, Rebecca, did not come to the hospital when I called to tell her our mother had just died.

She did not come to the funeral either.

But one week later, when she heard there was a house, a savings account, and a safe in Mom’s closet, she appeared on my porch in black like grief was a dress code she could put on when it finally became useful.

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The first thing she said to me from the bridal shower was, “I can’t come right now, Clara. We’re about to do a toast.”

I was sitting in the ER hallway at Austin General Hospital with my mother’s purse pressed to my chest.

The vinyl chair was cold through my pants.

The air smelled like bleach, burnt coffee, and that metallic smell hospitals get after too many doors have opened and closed.

Behind a blue curtain, my mother had just taken her last breath after three weeks of fever, oxygen, medications, nurse check-ins, and nights when I slept with my shoes on because I was afraid to miss the moment she needed me.

My sweater had IV fluid dried on one sleeve.

My hair was stuck to my cheek.

The zipper on Mom’s purse was biting into my palm because I had been holding it too tightly.

“Rebecca,” I said, trying to keep my voice from breaking. “Mom died.”

Music played on the other end of the phone.

There was laughter too.

Then a woman shouted, “Have the bride open another gift!”

Rebecca lowered her voice, but not in the way people do when sorrow hits them.

She sounded irritated.

“Oh, Clara,” she said. “That’s awful. But today is Daniela’s bridal shower. You know how long we’ve been planning this.”

I stared down at my shoes.

There was mud on one heel from the parking lot, and one shoelace had come loose.

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