The Boy Buried That Afternoon Came Back To Grandma’s Porch-hihehu

Coming home from my eight-year-old grandson’s funeral, I found him standing on my porch in torn clothes.

For the rest of my life, I will remember the porch light first.

Not the cemetery.

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Not the casket.

The porch light.

It buzzed above Tyler’s head in the rain, throwing that sick yellow glow over his face like the world had made a mistake and did not know how to correct it.

He was supposed to be buried.

I had watched the funeral director’s men lower the small white casket into the ground at Maplewood Cemetery while rain collected in the folds of my umbrella and ran down the back of my neck.

I had watched my son Brian bend over like grief had punched the breath out of him.

I had watched Michelle press a tissue to her nose and whisper to every neighbor who hugged her that she did not understand how God could take a child from a good family.

Then I drove home alone, still wearing the same black dress, with church lilies wilting on the passenger seat and mud drying on my shoes.

Less than an hour later, Tyler was on my porch.

His blue school jacket was ripped at one shoulder.

One shoe was missing.

His socks were soaked dark.

Mud streaked his face, his hands, and the torn cuff at his wrist.

His teeth clicked so hard I heard them through the storm door.

“Grandma Ellie,” he whispered.

My hand was on the deadbolt.

I remember that too.

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